On 11/10/08 10:42 PM, Dhruba Borthakur [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2. Create a virtual IP, say name.xx.com that points to the real
machine name of the machine on which the namenode runs.
Everyone doing this should be aware of the discussion happening in
Goel, Ankur wrote:
Hi Folks,
I am looking for some advice on some the ways / techniques
that people are using to get around namenode failures (Both disk and
host).
We have a small cluster with several job scheduled for periodic
execution on the same host where name server runs.
Goel, Ankur wrote:
Hi Folks,
I am looking for some advice on some the ways / techniques
that people are using to get around namenode failures (Both disk and
host).
We have a small cluster with several job scheduled for periodic
execution on the same host where name server runs.
-
From: Amar Kamat [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 10, 2008 3:53 PM
To: core-user@hadoop.apache.org
Subject: Re: Best way to handle namespace host failures
Goel, Ankur wrote:
Hi Folks,
I am looking for some advice on some the ways /
techniques
that people
smoothly in production without abrupt failures.
Thanks
-Ankur
-Original Message-
From: Amar Kamat [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 10, 2008 3:53 PM
To: core-user@hadoop.apache.org
Subject: Re: Best way to handle namespace host failures
Goel, Ankur wrote:
Hi Folks
@hadoop.apache.org
Cc: Ian Holsman
Subject: Re: Best way to handle namespace host failures
There has been a lot of discussion on this list about handling namenode
failover. Generally the most common approach is to backup the namenode
to
an NFS mount and manually instantiate a new namenode when your current
Couple of things that one can do:
1. dfs.name.dir should have at least two locations, one on the local
disk and one on NFS. This means that all transactions are
synchronously logged into two places.
2. Create a virtual IP, say name.xx.com that points to the real
machine name of the machine on