Re: Datafile Corruption
Cool ! Thanks for sharing the RCA. On Wed, Oct 9, 2019 at 2:56 PM Philip Ó Condúin wrote: > Just to follow up on this issue as others may see it in the future, we > cracked it! > > Ou datafile corruption issues were a problem with the OS wrongly taking > one block belonging to a C* data file thinking it was no longer used and > treating it as a free block that would later be used. > > For example: > C* deletes file after compaction, OS collects all blocks which are free > now and sends TRIM command to SSD, but SSD from time to time picks the > wrong block, not the one reported by OS - does the trim - causing zeroized > blocks to be seen in the datafile and later use it for different file. > So the symptom is - we suddenly see 4096 zeroes in the datafile- it means > SSD just trimmed the block, after some time we can see some data written to > those blocks - it means the block is used by other file and therefore gives > us a corrupt file. > > We turned off the scheduled TRIM function on the OS and we are no longer > getting corruptions. > > This was very difficult to pinpoint. > > On Thu, 15 Aug 2019 at 00:09, Patrick McFadin wrote: > >> If you hadn't mentioned the fact you are using physical disk I would have >> guessed you were using virtual disks on a SAN. I've seen this sort of thing >> happen a lot there. Are there any virtual layers between the cassandra >> process and the hardware? Just a reminder, fsync can be a liar and the >> virtual layer can mock the response back to user land while the actual bits >> can be dropped before hitting the disk. >> >> If not, you should be looking hard at your disk options. fstab, >> schedulers, etc. In that case, you need this: >> https://tobert.github.io/pages/als-cassandra-21-tuning-guide.html >> >> >> Patrick >> >> On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 2:03 PM Forkalsrud, Erik >> wrote: >> >>> The dmesg command will usually show information about hardware errors. >>> >>> An example from a spinning disk: >>> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Unhandled sense code >>> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Result: hostbyte=DID_OK driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE >>> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Sense Key : Medium Error [current] >>> Info fld=0x6fc72 >>> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Add. Sense: Unrecovered read error >>> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] CDB: Read(10): 28 00 00 06 fc 70 00 00 08 00 >>> >>> >>> Also, you can read the file like >>> "cat /data/ssd2/data/KeyspaceMetadata/x-x/lb-26203-big-Data.db > >>> /dev/null" >>> If you get an error message, it's probably a hardware issue. >>> >>> - Erik - >>> >>> -- >>> *From:* Philip Ó Condúin >>> *Sent:* Thursday, August 8, 2019 09:58 >>> *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org >>> *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption >>> >>> Hi Jon, >>> >>> Good question, I'm not sure if we're using NVMe, I don't see /dev/nvme >>> but we could still be using it. >>> We using *Cisco UCS C220 M4 SFF* so I'm just going to check the spec. >>> >>> Our Kernal is the following, we're using REDHAT so I'm told we can't >>> upgrade the version until the next major release anyway. >>> root@cass 0 17:32:28 ~ # uname -r >>> 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Phil >>> >>> On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 17:35, Jon Haddad wrote: >>> >>> Any chance you're using NVMe with an older Linux kernel? I've seen a >>> *lot* filesystem errors from using older CentOS versions. You'll want to >>> be using a version > 4.15. >>> >>> On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 9:31 AM Philip Ó Condúin < >>> philipocond...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> *@Jeff *- If it was hardware that would explain it all, but do you >>> think it's possible to have every server in the cluster with a hardware >>> issue? >>> The data is sensitive and the customer would lose their mind if I sent >>> it off-site which is a pity cause I could really do with the help. >>> The corruption is occurring irregularly on every server and instance and >>> column family in the cluster. Out of 72 instances, we are getting maybe 10 >>> corrupt files per day. >>> We are using vnodes (256) and it is happening in both DC's >>> >>> *@Asad *- internode compression is set to ALL on every server. I have >>> checked the packets for the private interconnect and I can'
Re: Datafile Corruption
Just to follow up on this issue as others may see it in the future, we cracked it! Ou datafile corruption issues were a problem with the OS wrongly taking one block belonging to a C* data file thinking it was no longer used and treating it as a free block that would later be used. For example: C* deletes file after compaction, OS collects all blocks which are free now and sends TRIM command to SSD, but SSD from time to time picks the wrong block, not the one reported by OS - does the trim - causing zeroized blocks to be seen in the datafile and later use it for different file. So the symptom is - we suddenly see 4096 zeroes in the datafile- it means SSD just trimmed the block, after some time we can see some data written to those blocks - it means the block is used by other file and therefore gives us a corrupt file. We turned off the scheduled TRIM function on the OS and we are no longer getting corruptions. This was very difficult to pinpoint. On Thu, 15 Aug 2019 at 00:09, Patrick McFadin wrote: > If you hadn't mentioned the fact you are using physical disk I would have > guessed you were using virtual disks on a SAN. I've seen this sort of thing > happen a lot there. Are there any virtual layers between the cassandra > process and the hardware? Just a reminder, fsync can be a liar and the > virtual layer can mock the response back to user land while the actual bits > can be dropped before hitting the disk. > > If not, you should be looking hard at your disk options. fstab, > schedulers, etc. In that case, you need this: > https://tobert.github.io/pages/als-cassandra-21-tuning-guide.html > > > Patrick > > On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 2:03 PM Forkalsrud, Erik > wrote: > >> The dmesg command will usually show information about hardware errors. >> >> An example from a spinning disk: >> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Unhandled sense code >> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Result: hostbyte=DID_OK driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE >> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Sense Key : Medium Error [current] >> Info fld=0x6fc72 >> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Add. Sense: Unrecovered read error >> sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] CDB: Read(10): 28 00 00 06 fc 70 00 00 08 00 >> >> >> Also, you can read the file like >> "cat /data/ssd2/data/KeyspaceMetadata/x-x/lb-26203-big-Data.db > >> /dev/null" >> If you get an error message, it's probably a hardware issue. >> >> - Erik - >> >> -- >> *From:* Philip Ó Condúin >> *Sent:* Thursday, August 8, 2019 09:58 >> *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org >> *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption >> >> Hi Jon, >> >> Good question, I'm not sure if we're using NVMe, I don't see /dev/nvme >> but we could still be using it. >> We using *Cisco UCS C220 M4 SFF* so I'm just going to check the spec. >> >> Our Kernal is the following, we're using REDHAT so I'm told we can't >> upgrade the version until the next major release anyway. >> root@cass 0 17:32:28 ~ # uname -r >> 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 >> >> Cheers, >> Phil >> >> On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 17:35, Jon Haddad wrote: >> >> Any chance you're using NVMe with an older Linux kernel? I've seen a >> *lot* filesystem errors from using older CentOS versions. You'll want to >> be using a version > 4.15. >> >> On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 9:31 AM Philip Ó Condúin >> wrote: >> >> *@Jeff *- If it was hardware that would explain it all, but do you think >> it's possible to have every server in the cluster with a hardware issue? >> The data is sensitive and the customer would lose their mind if I sent it >> off-site which is a pity cause I could really do with the help. >> The corruption is occurring irregularly on every server and instance and >> column family in the cluster. Out of 72 instances, we are getting maybe 10 >> corrupt files per day. >> We are using vnodes (256) and it is happening in both DC's >> >> *@Asad *- internode compression is set to ALL on every server. I have >> checked the packets for the private interconnect and I can't see any >> dropped packets, there are dropped packets for other interfaces, but not >> for the private ones, I will get the network team to double-check this. >> The corruption is only on the application schema, we are not getting >> corruption on any system or cass keyspaces. Corruption is happening in >> both DC's. We are getting corruption for the 1 application schema we have >> across all tables in the keyspace, it's not limited to one table. >> Im not sure why the app team decided to not use
Re: Datafile Corruption
If you hadn't mentioned the fact you are using physical disk I would have guessed you were using virtual disks on a SAN. I've seen this sort of thing happen a lot there. Are there any virtual layers between the cassandra process and the hardware? Just a reminder, fsync can be a liar and the virtual layer can mock the response back to user land while the actual bits can be dropped before hitting the disk. If not, you should be looking hard at your disk options. fstab, schedulers, etc. In that case, you need this: https://tobert.github.io/pages/als-cassandra-21-tuning-guide.html Patrick On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 2:03 PM Forkalsrud, Erik wrote: > The dmesg command will usually show information about hardware errors. > > An example from a spinning disk: > sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Unhandled sense code > sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Result: hostbyte=DID_OK driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE > sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Sense Key : Medium Error [current] > Info fld=0x6fc72 > sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Add. Sense: Unrecovered read error > sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] CDB: Read(10): 28 00 00 06 fc 70 00 00 08 00 > > > Also, you can read the file like > "cat /data/ssd2/data/KeyspaceMetadata/x-x/lb-26203-big-Data.db > > /dev/null" > If you get an error message, it's probably a hardware issue. > > - Erik - > > -- > *From:* Philip Ó Condúin > *Sent:* Thursday, August 8, 2019 09:58 > *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org > *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption > > Hi Jon, > > Good question, I'm not sure if we're using NVMe, I don't see /dev/nvme but > we could still be using it. > We using *Cisco UCS C220 M4 SFF* so I'm just going to check the spec. > > Our Kernal is the following, we're using REDHAT so I'm told we can't > upgrade the version until the next major release anyway. > root@cass 0 17:32:28 ~ # uname -r > 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 > > Cheers, > Phil > > On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 17:35, Jon Haddad wrote: > > Any chance you're using NVMe with an older Linux kernel? I've seen a > *lot* filesystem errors from using older CentOS versions. You'll want to > be using a version > 4.15. > > On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 9:31 AM Philip Ó Condúin > wrote: > > *@Jeff *- If it was hardware that would explain it all, but do you think > it's possible to have every server in the cluster with a hardware issue? > The data is sensitive and the customer would lose their mind if I sent it > off-site which is a pity cause I could really do with the help. > The corruption is occurring irregularly on every server and instance and > column family in the cluster. Out of 72 instances, we are getting maybe 10 > corrupt files per day. > We are using vnodes (256) and it is happening in both DC's > > *@Asad *- internode compression is set to ALL on every server. I have > checked the packets for the private interconnect and I can't see any > dropped packets, there are dropped packets for other interfaces, but not > for the private ones, I will get the network team to double-check this. > The corruption is only on the application schema, we are not getting > corruption on any system or cass keyspaces. Corruption is happening in > both DC's. We are getting corruption for the 1 application schema we have > across all tables in the keyspace, it's not limited to one table. > Im not sure why the app team decided to not use default compression, I > must ask them. > > > > I have been checking the /var/log/messages today going back a few weeks > and can see a serious amount of broken pipe errors across all servers and > instances. > Here is a snippet from one server but most pipe errors are similar: > > Jul 9 03:00:08 cassandra: INFO 02:00:08 Writing > Memtable-sstable_activity@1126262628(43.631KiB serialized bytes, 18072 > ops, 0%/0% of on/off-heap limit) > Jul 9 03:00:13 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed > Jul 9 03:00:19 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: ERROR 02:00:22 Got an IOException during write! > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: java.io.IOException: Broken pipe > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.FileDispatcherImpl.write0(Native > Method) ~[na:1.8.0_172] > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at > sun.nio.ch.SocketDispatcher.write(SocketDispatcher.java:47) ~[na:1.8.0_172] > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at > sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.writeFromNativeBuffer(IOUtil.java:93) ~[na:1.8.0_172] > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.write(IOUtil.java:65) > ~[na:1.8.0_172] > Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at > sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.write(SocketChannelImpl.java:471) > ~[na:1.8.0_172] &g
Re: Datafile Corruption
The dmesg command will usually show information about hardware errors. An example from a spinning disk: sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Unhandled sense code sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Result: hostbyte=DID_OK driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Sense Key : Medium Error [current] Info fld=0x6fc72 sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] Add. Sense: Unrecovered read error sd 0:0:10:0: [sdi] CDB: Read(10): 28 00 00 06 fc 70 00 00 08 00 Also, you can read the file like "cat /data/ssd2/data/KeyspaceMetadata/x-x/lb-26203-big-Data.db > /dev/null" If you get an error message, it's probably a hardware issue. - Erik - From: Philip Ó Condúin Sent: Thursday, August 8, 2019 09:58 To: user@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: Datafile Corruption Hi Jon, Good question, I'm not sure if we're using NVMe, I don't see /dev/nvme but we could still be using it. We using Cisco UCS C220 M4 SFF so I'm just going to check the spec. Our Kernal is the following, we're using REDHAT so I'm told we can't upgrade the version until the next major release anyway. root@cass 0 17:32:28 ~ # uname -r 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 Cheers, Phil On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 17:35, Jon Haddad mailto:j...@jonhaddad.com>> wrote: Any chance you're using NVMe with an older Linux kernel? I've seen a *lot* filesystem errors from using older CentOS versions. You'll want to be using a version > 4.15. On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 9:31 AM Philip Ó Condúin mailto:philipocond...@gmail.com>> wrote: @Jeff - If it was hardware that would explain it all, but do you think it's possible to have every server in the cluster with a hardware issue? The data is sensitive and the customer would lose their mind if I sent it off-site which is a pity cause I could really do with the help. The corruption is occurring irregularly on every server and instance and column family in the cluster. Out of 72 instances, we are getting maybe 10 corrupt files per day. We are using vnodes (256) and it is happening in both DC's @Asad - internode compression is set to ALL on every server. I have checked the packets for the private interconnect and I can't see any dropped packets, there are dropped packets for other interfaces, but not for the private ones, I will get the network team to double-check this. The corruption is only on the application schema, we are not getting corruption on any system or cass keyspaces. Corruption is happening in both DC's. We are getting corruption for the 1 application schema we have across all tables in the keyspace, it's not limited to one table. Im not sure why the app team decided to not use default compression, I must ask them. I have been checking the /var/log/messages today going back a few weeks and can see a serious amount of broken pipe errors across all servers and instances. Here is a snippet from one server but most pipe errors are similar: Jul 9 03:00:08 cassandra: INFO 02:00:08 Writing Memtable-sstable_activity@1126262628(43.631KiB serialized bytes, 18072 ops, 0%/0% of on/off-heap limit) Jul 9 03:00:13 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed Jul 9 03:00:19 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: ERROR 02:00:22 Got an IOException during write! Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: java.io.IOException: Broken pipe Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.FileDispatcherImpl.write0(Native Method) ~[na:1.8.0_172] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.SocketDispatcher.write(SocketDispatcher.java:47) ~[na:1.8.0_172] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.writeFromNativeBuffer(IOUtil.java:93) ~[na:1.8.0_172] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.write(IOUtil.java:65) ~[na:1.8.0_172] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.write(SocketChannelImpl.java:471) ~[na:1.8.0_172] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at org.apache.thrift.transport.TNonblockingSocket.write(TNonblockingSocket.java:165) ~[libthrift-0.9.2.jar:0.9.2] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.Buffer.writeTo(Buffer.java:104) ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.FastMemoryOutputTransport.streamTo(FastMemoryOutputTransport.java:112) ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.Message.write(Message.java:222) ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.handleWrite(TDisruptorServer.java:598) [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.processKey(TDisruptorServer.java:569) [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:22 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.select(TDisruptorServer.java:423) [thrift-server-0.3.7.
Re: Datafile Corruption
3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >>> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.FastMemoryOutputTransport.streamTo(FastMemoryOutputTransport.java:112) >>> ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >>> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.Message.write(Message.java:222) >>> ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >>> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.handleWrite(TDisruptorServer.java:598) >>> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >>> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.processKey(TDisruptorServer.java:569) >>> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >>> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.select(TDisruptorServer.java:423) >>> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >>> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.run(TDisruptorServer.java:383) >>> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >>> Jul 9 03:00:31 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed >>> Jul 9 03:00:37 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed >>> Jul 9 03:00:43 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed >>> >>> >>> >>> On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 15:42, ZAIDI, ASAD A wrote: >>> >>>> Did you check if packets are NOT being dropped for network interfaces >>>> Cassandra instances are consuming (ifconfig –a) internode compression is >>>> set for all endpoint – may be network is playing any role here? >>>> >>>> is this corruption limited so certain keyspace/table | DCs or is that >>>> wide spread – the log snippet you shared it looked like only specific >>>> keyspace/table is affected – is that correct? >>>> >>>> When you remove corrupted sstable of a certain table, I guess you >>>> verifies all nodes for corrupted sstables for same table (may be with with >>>> nodetool scrub tool) so to limit spread of corruptions – right? >>>> >>>> Just curious to know – you’re not using lz4/default compressor for all >>>> tables there must be some reason for it. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> *From:* Philip Ó Condúin [mailto:philipocond...@gmail.com] >>>> *Sent:* Thursday, August 08, 2019 6:20 AM >>>> *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org >>>> *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Hi All, >>>> >>>> Thank you so much for the replies. >>>> >>>> Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some >>>> sort of corruption in a Cassandra cluster. >>>> >>>>- Sudden Power cut - *We have had no power cuts in the >>>>datacenters* >>>>- Network Issues - *no network issues from what I can tell* >>>>- Disk full - *I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks >>>>below.* >>>>- An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 -* couldn't >>>>find any Jira issues similar to ours.* >>>>- Bit Flips -* we have compression enabled so I don't think this >>>>should be an issue.* >>>>- Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too -* we have not >>>>upgraded* >>>>- Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different >>>>type - *I will need to ask the apps team how they are using the >>>>database.* >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of >>>> pressure from above to get this fixed and I can't figure it out. >>>> >>>> This is a PRE-PROD environment. >>>> >>>>- 2 datacenters. >>>>- 9 physical servers in each datacenter >>>>- 4 Cassandra instances on each server >>>>- 72 Cassandra instances across the 2 data centres, 36 in site A, >>>>36 in site B. >>>> >>>> >>>> We also have 2 Reaper Nodes we use for repair. One reaper node in each >>>> datacenter each running with its own Cassandra back end in a cluster >>>> together. >>>> >>>> OS Details [Red Hat Linux] >>>> cass_a@x 0 10:53:01 ~ $ uname -a >>>> Linux x 3
Re: Datafile Corruption
llbacks suppressed >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: ERROR 02:00:30 Got an IOException during >> write! >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: java.io.IOException: Broken pipe >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> sun.nio.ch.FileDispatcherImpl.write0(Native Method) ~[na:1.8.0_172] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> sun.nio.ch.SocketDispatcher.write(SocketDispatcher.java:47) ~[na:1.8.0_172] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.writeFromNativeBuffer(IOUtil.java:93) ~[na:1.8.0_172] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.write(IOUtil.java:65) >> ~[na:1.8.0_172] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.write(SocketChannelImpl.java:471) >> ~[na:1.8.0_172] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> org.apache.thrift.transport.TNonblockingSocket.write(TNonblockingSocket.java:165) >> ~[libthrift-0.9.2.jar:0.9.2] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.Buffer.writeTo(Buffer.java:104) >> ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.FastMemoryOutputTransport.streamTo(FastMemoryOutputTransport.java:112) >> ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.Message.write(Message.java:222) >> ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.handleWrite(TDisruptorServer.java:598) >> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.processKey(TDisruptorServer.java:569) >> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.select(TDisruptorServer.java:423) >> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at >> com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.run(TDisruptorServer.java:383) >> [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] >> Jul 9 03:00:31 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed >> Jul 9 03:00:37 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed >> Jul 9 03:00:43 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed >> >> >> >> On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 15:42, ZAIDI, ASAD A wrote: >> >>> Did you check if packets are NOT being dropped for network interfaces >>> Cassandra instances are consuming (ifconfig –a) internode compression is >>> set for all endpoint – may be network is playing any role here? >>> >>> is this corruption limited so certain keyspace/table | DCs or is that >>> wide spread – the log snippet you shared it looked like only specific >>> keyspace/table is affected – is that correct? >>> >>> When you remove corrupted sstable of a certain table, I guess you >>> verifies all nodes for corrupted sstables for same table (may be with with >>> nodetool scrub tool) so to limit spread of corruptions – right? >>> >>> Just curious to know – you’re not using lz4/default compressor for all >>> tables there must be some reason for it. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> *From:* Philip Ó Condúin [mailto:philipocond...@gmail.com] >>> *Sent:* Thursday, August 08, 2019 6:20 AM >>> *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org >>> *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption >>> >>> >>> >>> Hi All, >>> >>> Thank you so much for the replies. >>> >>> Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some >>> sort of corruption in a Cassandra cluster. >>> >>>- Sudden Power cut - *We have had no power cuts in the datacenters* >>>- Network Issues - *no network issues from what I can tell* >>>- Disk full - *I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks >>>below.* >>>- An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 -* couldn't find >>>any Jira issues similar to ours.* >>>- Bit Flips -* we have compression enabled so I don't think this >>>should be an issue.* >>>- Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too -* we have not >>>upgraded* >>>- Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different >>>type - *I will need to ask the apps team how they are using the >>>database.* >>> >>> >>> >>> Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of >>> pressure from above to g
Re: Datafile Corruption
cassandra: at > org.apache.thrift.transport.TNonblockingSocket.write(TNonblockingSocket.java:165) > ~[libthrift-0.9.2.jar:0.9.2] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.Buffer.writeTo(Buffer.java:104) > ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.util.mem.FastMemoryOutputTransport.streamTo(FastMemoryOutputTransport.java:112) > ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.Message.write(Message.java:222) > ~[thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.handleWrite(TDisruptorServer.java:598) > [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.processKey(TDisruptorServer.java:569) > [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.select(TDisruptorServer.java:423) > [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at > com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.run(TDisruptorServer.java:383) > [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] > Jul 9 03:00:31 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed > Jul 9 03:00:37 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed > Jul 9 03:00:43 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed > > > > On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 15:42, ZAIDI, ASAD A wrote: > >> Did you check if packets are NOT being dropped for network interfaces >> Cassandra instances are consuming (ifconfig –a) internode compression is >> set for all endpoint – may be network is playing any role here? >> >> is this corruption limited so certain keyspace/table | DCs or is that >> wide spread – the log snippet you shared it looked like only specific >> keyspace/table is affected – is that correct? >> >> When you remove corrupted sstable of a certain table, I guess you >> verifies all nodes for corrupted sstables for same table (may be with with >> nodetool scrub tool) so to limit spread of corruptions – right? >> >> Just curious to know – you’re not using lz4/default compressor for all >> tables there must be some reason for it. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> *From:* Philip Ó Condúin [mailto:philipocond...@gmail.com] >> *Sent:* Thursday, August 08, 2019 6:20 AM >> *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org >> *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption >> >> >> >> Hi All, >> >> Thank you so much for the replies. >> >> Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some sort >> of corruption in a Cassandra cluster. >> >>- Sudden Power cut - *We have had no power cuts in the datacenters* >>- Network Issues - *no network issues from what I can tell* >>- Disk full - *I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks >>below.* >>- An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 -* couldn't find >>any Jira issues similar to ours.* >>- Bit Flips -* we have compression enabled so I don't think this >>should be an issue.* >>- Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too -* we have not >>upgraded* >>- Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different type >>- *I will need to ask the apps team how they are using the database.* >> >> >> >> Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of >> pressure from above to get this fixed and I can't figure it out. >> >> This is a PRE-PROD environment. >> >>- 2 datacenters. >>- 9 physical servers in each datacenter >>- 4 Cassandra instances on each server >>- 72 Cassandra instances across the 2 data centres, 36 in site A, 36 >>in site B. >> >> >> We also have 2 Reaper Nodes we use for repair. One reaper node in each >> datacenter each running with its own Cassandra back end in a cluster >> together. >> >> OS Details [Red Hat Linux] >> cass_a@x 0 10:53:01 ~ $ uname -a >> Linux x 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Dec 19 10:46:58 EST 2018 >> x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux >> >> cass_a@x 0 10:57:31 ~ $ cat /etc/*release >> NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server" >> VERSION="7.6 (Maipo)" >> ID="rhel" >> >> Storage Layout >> cass_a@xx 0 10:46:28 ~ $ df -h >> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on >> /dev/mapper/vg01-lv_root20G 2.2G 18G 11% / >> devtmpfs63G 0 63G 0% /dev >
Re: Datafile Corruption
9 03:00:30 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$SelectorThread.processKey(TDisruptorServer.java:569) [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.select(TDisruptorServer.java:423) [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:30 cassandra: at com.thinkaurelius.thrift.TDisruptorServer$AbstractSelectorThread.run(TDisruptorServer.java:383) [thrift-server-0.3.7.jar:na] Jul 9 03:00:31 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed Jul 9 03:00:37 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed Jul 9 03:00:43 kernel: fnic_handle_fip_timer: 8 callbacks suppressed On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 at 15:42, ZAIDI, ASAD A wrote: > Did you check if packets are NOT being dropped for network interfaces > Cassandra instances are consuming (ifconfig –a) internode compression is > set for all endpoint – may be network is playing any role here? > > is this corruption limited so certain keyspace/table | DCs or is that wide > spread – the log snippet you shared it looked like only specific > keyspace/table is affected – is that correct? > > When you remove corrupted sstable of a certain table, I guess you verifies > all nodes for corrupted sstables for same table (may be with with nodetool > scrub tool) so to limit spread of corruptions – right? > > Just curious to know – you’re not using lz4/default compressor for all > tables there must be some reason for it. > > > > > > > > *From:* Philip Ó Condúin [mailto:philipocond...@gmail.com] > *Sent:* Thursday, August 08, 2019 6:20 AM > *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org > *Subject:* Re: Datafile Corruption > > > > Hi All, > > Thank you so much for the replies. > > Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some sort > of corruption in a Cassandra cluster. > >- Sudden Power cut - *We have had no power cuts in the datacenters* >- Network Issues - *no network issues from what I can tell* >- Disk full - *I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks below.* >- An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 -* couldn't find >any Jira issues similar to ours.* >- Bit Flips -* we have compression enabled so I don't think this >should be an issue.* >- Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too -* we have not >upgraded* >- Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different type >- *I will need to ask the apps team how they are using the database.* > > > > Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of > pressure from above to get this fixed and I can't figure it out. > > This is a PRE-PROD environment. > >- 2 datacenters. >- 9 physical servers in each datacenter >- 4 Cassandra instances on each server >- 72 Cassandra instances across the 2 data centres, 36 in site A, 36 >in site B. > > > We also have 2 Reaper Nodes we use for repair. One reaper node in each > datacenter each running with its own Cassandra back end in a cluster > together. > > OS Details [Red Hat Linux] > cass_a@x 0 10:53:01 ~ $ uname -a > Linux x 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Dec 19 10:46:58 EST 2018 > x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux > > cass_a@x 0 10:57:31 ~ $ cat /etc/*release > NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server" > VERSION="7.6 (Maipo)" > ID="rhel" > > Storage Layout > cass_a@xx 0 10:46:28 ~ $ df -h > Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on > /dev/mapper/vg01-lv_root20G 2.2G 18G 11% / > devtmpfs63G 0 63G 0% /dev > tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /dev/shm > tmpfs 63G 4.1G 59G 7% /run > tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup > >> 4 cassandra instances > /dev/sdd 1.5T 802G 688G 54% /data/ssd4 > /dev/sda 1.5T 798G 692G 54% /data/ssd1 > /dev/sdb 1.5T 681G 810G 46% /data/ssd2 > /dev/sdc 1.5T 558G 932G 38% /data/ssd3 > > Cassandra load is about 200GB and the rest of the space is snapshots > > CPU > cass_a@x 127 10:58:47 ~ $ lscpu | grep -E '^Thread|^Core|^Socket|^CPU\(' > CPU(s):64 > Thread(s) per core:2 > Core(s) per socket:16 > Socket(s): 2 > > *Description of problem:* > During repair of the cluster, we are seeing multiple corruptions in the > log files on a lot of instances. There seems to be no pattern to the > corruption. It seems that the repair job is finding all the corrupted > files for us. The repair w
RE: Datafile Corruption
Did you check if packets are NOT being dropped for network interfaces Cassandra instances are consuming (ifconfig –a) internode compression is set for all endpoint – may be network is playing any role here? is this corruption limited so certain keyspace/table | DCs or is that wide spread – the log snippet you shared it looked like only specific keyspace/table is affected – is that correct? When you remove corrupted sstable of a certain table, I guess you verifies all nodes for corrupted sstables for same table (may be with with nodetool scrub tool) so to limit spread of corruptions – right? Just curious to know – you’re not using lz4/default compressor for all tables there must be some reason for it. From: Philip Ó Condúin [mailto:philipocond...@gmail.com] Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2019 6:20 AM To: user@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: Datafile Corruption Hi All, Thank you so much for the replies. Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some sort of corruption in a Cassandra cluster. * Sudden Power cut - We have had no power cuts in the datacenters * Network Issues - no network issues from what I can tell * Disk full - I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks below. * An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 - couldn't find any Jira issues similar to ours. * Bit Flips - we have compression enabled so I don't think this should be an issue. * Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too - we have not upgraded * Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different type - I will need to ask the apps team how they are using the database. Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of pressure from above to get this fixed and I can't figure it out. This is a PRE-PROD environment. * 2 datacenters. * 9 physical servers in each datacenter * 4 Cassandra instances on each server * 72 Cassandra instances across the 2 data centres, 36 in site A, 36 in site B. We also have 2 Reaper Nodes we use for repair. One reaper node in each datacenter each running with its own Cassandra back end in a cluster together. OS Details [Red Hat Linux] cass_a@x 0 10:53:01 ~ $ uname -a Linux x 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Dec 19 10:46:58 EST 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cass_a@x 0 10:57:31 ~ $ cat /etc/*release NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server" VERSION="7.6 (Maipo)" ID="rhel" Storage Layout cass_a@xx 0 10:46:28 ~ $ df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/vg01-lv_root20G 2.2G 18G 11% / devtmpfs63G 0 63G 0% /dev tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /dev/shm tmpfs 63G 4.1G 59G 7% /run tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup >> 4 cassandra instances /dev/sdd 1.5T 802G 688G 54% /data/ssd4 /dev/sda 1.5T 798G 692G 54% /data/ssd1 /dev/sdb 1.5T 681G 810G 46% /data/ssd2 /dev/sdc 1.5T 558G 932G 38% /data/ssd3 Cassandra load is about 200GB and the rest of the space is snapshots CPU cass_a@x 127 10:58:47 ~ $ lscpu | grep -E '^Thread|^Core|^Socket|^CPU\(' CPU(s):64 Thread(s) per core:2 Core(s) per socket:16 Socket(s): 2 Description of problem: During repair of the cluster, we are seeing multiple corruptions in the log files on a lot of instances. There seems to be no pattern to the corruption. It seems that the repair job is finding all the corrupted files for us. The repair will hang on the node where the corrupted file is found. To fix this we remove/rename the datafile and bounce the Cassandra instance. Our hardware/OS team have stated there is no problem on their side. I do not believe it the repair causing the corruption. We have maintenance scripts that run every night running compactions and creating snapshots, I decided to turn these off, fix any corruptions we currently had and ran major compaction on all nodes, once this was done we had a "clean" cluster and we left the cluster for a few days. After the process we noticed one corruption in the cluster, this datafile was created after I turned off the maintenance scripts so my theory of the scripts causing the issue was wrong. We then kicked off another repair and started to find more corrupt files created after the maintenance script was turned off. So let me give you an example of a corrupted file and maybe someone might be able to work through it with me? When this corrupted file was reported in the log it looks like it was the repair that found it. $ journalctl -u cassmeta-cass_b.service --since "2019-08-07 22:25:00" --until "2019-08-07 22:45:00" Aug
Re: Datafile Corruption
The corrupt block exception from the compressor in 2.1/2.2 is something I don’t recall ever being attributed to anything other than bad hardware, so that seems by far the most likely option. The corruption that the compressor is catching says the checksum written immediately after the compressed block doesn’t match when read back. How sensitive is this data? Would you be able to send one of the corrupt data files to a developer to check? Or is it something like PII you can’t share? Have you found this corruption on every single instance? Are you using single tokens or vnodes? Is it happening in both dcs? > On Aug 8, 2019, at 4:20 AM, Philip Ó Condúin wrote: > > Hi All, > > Thank you so much for the replies. > > Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some sort of > corruption in a Cassandra cluster. > > Sudden Power cut - We have had no power cuts in the datacenters > Network Issues - no network issues from what I can tell > Disk full - I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks below. > An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 - couldn't find any Jira > issues similar to ours. > Bit Flips - we have compression enabled so I don't think this should be an > issue. > Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too - we have not upgraded > Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different type - I will > need to ask the apps team how they are using the database. > > > Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of > pressure from above to get this fixed and I can't figure it out. > > This is a PRE-PROD environment. > 2 datacenters. > 9 physical servers in each datacenter > 4 Cassandra instances on each server > 72 Cassandra instances across the 2 data centres, 36 in site A, 36 in site B. > > We also have 2 Reaper Nodes we use for repair. One reaper node in each > datacenter each running with its own Cassandra back end in a cluster together. > > OS Details [Red Hat Linux] > cass_a@x 0 10:53:01 ~ $ uname -a > Linux x 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Dec 19 10:46:58 EST 2018 x86_64 > x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux > > cass_a@x 0 10:57:31 ~ $ cat /etc/*release > NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server" > VERSION="7.6 (Maipo)" > ID="rhel" > > Storage Layout > cass_a@xx 0 10:46:28 ~ $ df -h > Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on > /dev/mapper/vg01-lv_root20G 2.2G 18G 11% / > devtmpfs63G 0 63G 0% /dev > tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /dev/shm > tmpfs 63G 4.1G 59G 7% /run > tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup > >> 4 cassandra instances > /dev/sdd 1.5T 802G 688G 54% /data/ssd4 > /dev/sda 1.5T 798G 692G 54% /data/ssd1 > /dev/sdb 1.5T 681G 810G 46% /data/ssd2 > /dev/sdc 1.5T 558G 932G 38% /data/ssd3 > > Cassandra load is about 200GB and the rest of the space is snapshots > > CPU > cass_a@x 127 10:58:47 ~ $ lscpu | grep -E '^Thread|^Core|^Socket|^CPU\(' > CPU(s):64 > Thread(s) per core:2 > Core(s) per socket:16 > Socket(s): 2 > > Description of problem: > During repair of the cluster, we are seeing multiple corruptions in the log > files on a lot of instances. There seems to be no pattern to the corruption. > It seems that the repair job is finding all the corrupted files for us. The > repair will hang on the node where the corrupted file is found. To fix this > we remove/rename the datafile and bounce the Cassandra instance. Our > hardware/OS team have stated there is no problem on their side. I do not > believe it the repair causing the corruption. > > We have maintenance scripts that run every night running compactions and > creating snapshots, I decided to turn these off, fix any corruptions we > currently had and ran major compaction on all nodes, once this was done we > had a "clean" cluster and we left the cluster for a few days. After the > process we noticed one corruption in the cluster, this datafile was created > after I turned off the maintenance scripts so my theory of the scripts > causing the issue was wrong. We then kicked off another repair and started > to find more corrupt files created after the maintenance script was turned > off. > > > So let me give you an example of a corrupted file and maybe someone might be > able to work through it with me? > > When this corrupted file was reported in the log it looks like it was the > repair that found it. > > $ journalctl -u cassmeta-cass_b.service --since "2019-08-07 22:25:00" --until > "2019-08-07 22:45:00" > > Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: INFO 21:30:33 Writing > Memtable-compactions_in_progress@830377457(0.008KiB serialized bytes, 1 ops, > 0%/0% of on/off-heap limit) > Aug 07
Re: Datafile Corruption
Hi All, Thank you so much for the replies. Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some sort of corruption in a Cassandra cluster. - Sudden Power cut - *We have had no power cuts in the datacenters* - Network Issues - *no network issues from what I can tell* - Disk full - *I don't think this is an issue for us, see disks below.* - An issue in Casandra version like Cassandra-13752 -* couldn't find any Jira issues similar to ours.* - Bit Flips -* we have compression enabled so I don't think this should be an issue.* - Repair during upgrade has caused corruption too -* we have not upgraded* - Dropping and adding columns with the same name but a different type - *I will need to ask the apps team how they are using the database.* Ok, let me try and explain the issue we are having, I am under a lot of pressure from above to get this fixed and I can't figure it out. This is a PRE-PROD environment. - 2 datacenters. - 9 physical servers in each datacenter - 4 Cassandra instances on each server - 72 Cassandra instances across the 2 data centres, 36 in site A, 36 in site B. We also have 2 Reaper Nodes we use for repair. One reaper node in each datacenter each running with its own Cassandra back end in a cluster together. OS Details [Red Hat Linux] cass_a@x 0 10:53:01 ~ $ uname -a Linux x 3.10.0-957.5.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Dec 19 10:46:58 EST 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cass_a@x 0 10:57:31 ~ $ cat /etc/*release NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server" VERSION="7.6 (Maipo)" ID="rhel" Storage Layout cass_a@xx 0 10:46:28 ~ $ df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/vg01-lv_root20G 2.2G 18G 11% / devtmpfs63G 0 63G 0% /dev tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /dev/shm tmpfs 63G 4.1G 59G 7% /run tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup >> 4 cassandra instances /dev/sdd 1.5T 802G 688G 54% /data/ssd4 /dev/sda 1.5T 798G 692G 54% /data/ssd1 /dev/sdb 1.5T 681G 810G 46% /data/ssd2 /dev/sdc 1.5T 558G 932G 38% /data/ssd3 Cassandra load is about 200GB and the rest of the space is snapshots CPU cass_a@x 127 10:58:47 ~ $ lscpu | grep -E '^Thread|^Core|^Socket|^CPU\(' CPU(s):64 Thread(s) per core:2 Core(s) per socket:16 Socket(s): 2 *Description of problem:* During repair of the cluster, we are seeing multiple corruptions in the log files on a lot of instances. There seems to be no pattern to the corruption. It seems that the repair job is finding all the corrupted files for us. The repair will hang on the node where the corrupted file is found. To fix this we remove/rename the datafile and bounce the Cassandra instance. Our hardware/OS team have stated there is no problem on their side. I do not believe it the repair causing the corruption. We have maintenance scripts that run every night running compactions and creating snapshots, I decided to turn these off, fix any corruptions we currently had and ran major compaction on all nodes, once this was done we had a "clean" cluster and we left the cluster for a few days. After the process we noticed one corruption in the cluster, this datafile was created after I turned off the maintenance scripts so my theory of the scripts causing the issue was wrong. We then kicked off another repair and started to find more corrupt files created after the maintenance script was turned off. So let me give you an example of a corrupted file and maybe someone might be able to work through it with me? When this corrupted file was reported in the log it looks like it was the repair that found it. $ journalctl -u cassmeta-cass_b.service --since "2019-08-07 22:25:00" --until "2019-08-07 22:45:00" Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: INFO 21:30:33 Writing Memtable-compactions_in_progress@830377457(0.008KiB serialized bytes, 1 ops, 0%/0% of on/off-heap limit) Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: ERROR 21:30:33 Failed creating a merkle tree for [repair #9587a200-b95a-11e9-8920-9f72868b8375 on KeyspaceMetadata/x, (-1476350953672479093,-1474461 Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: ERROR 21:30:33 Exception in thread Thread[ValidationExecutor:825,1,main] Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: org.apache.cassandra.io.FSReadError: org.apache.cassandra.io.sstable.CorruptSSTableException: Corrupted: /x/ssd2/data/KeyspaceMetadata/x-1e453cb0 Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: at org.apache.cassandra.io.util.RandomAccessReader.readBytes(RandomAccessReader.java:365) ~[apache-cassandra-2.2.13.jar:2.2.13] Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: at org.apache.cassandra.utils.ByteBufferUtil.read(ByteBufferUtil.java:361) ~[apache-cassandra-2.2.13.jar:2.2.13] Aug 07 22:30:33 cassandra[34611]: at org.apache.c
Re: Datafile Corruption
Repair during upgrade have caused corruption too. Also, dropping and adding columns with same name but different type Regards, Nitan Cell: 510 449 9629 > On Aug 7, 2019, at 2:42 PM, Jeff Jirsa wrote: > > Is compression enabled? > > If not, bit flips on disk can corrupt data files and reads + repair may send > that corruption to other hosts in the cluster > > >> On Aug 7, 2019, at 3:46 AM, Philip Ó Condúin >> wrote: >> >> Hi All, >> >> I am currently experiencing multiple datafile corruptions across most nodes >> in my cluster, there seems to be no pattern to the corruption. I'm starting >> to think it might be a bug, we're using Cassandra 2.2.13. >> >> Without going into detail about the issue I just want to confirm something. >> >> Can someone share with me a list of scenarios that would cause corruption? >> >> 1. OS failure >> 2. Cassandra disturbed during the writing >> >> etc etc. >> >> I need to investigate each scenario and don't want to leave any out. >> >> -- >> Regards, >> Phil
Re: Datafile Corruption
Is compression enabled? If not, bit flips on disk can corrupt data files and reads + repair may send that corruption to other hosts in the cluster > On Aug 7, 2019, at 3:46 AM, Philip Ó Condúin wrote: > > Hi All, > > I am currently experiencing multiple datafile corruptions across most nodes > in my cluster, there seems to be no pattern to the corruption. I'm starting > to think it might be a bug, we're using Cassandra 2.2.13. > > Without going into detail about the issue I just want to confirm something. > > Can someone share with me a list of scenarios that would cause corruption? > > 1. OS failure > 2. Cassandra disturbed during the writing > > etc etc. > > I need to investigate each scenario and don't want to leave any out. > > -- > Regards, > Phil
Re: Datafile Corruption
Few for reasons: Sudden Power cut Disk full Issue in casandra version like Cassandra-13752 On Wed, Aug 7, 2019, 4:16 PM Philip Ó Condúin wrote: > Hi All, > > I am currently experiencing multiple datafile corruptions across most > nodes in my cluster, there seems to be no pattern to the corruption. I'm > starting to think it might be a bug, we're using Cassandra 2.2.13. > > Without going into detail about the issue I just want to confirm something. > > Can someone share with me a list of scenarios that would cause corruption? > > 1. OS failure > 2. Cassandra disturbed during the writing > > etc etc. > > I need to investigate each scenario and don't want to leave any out. > > -- > Regards, > Phil >