RE: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
Thanks Alain for all your answer: - In a few days I am going to set up a maintenance window so I can test again to run repairs and see what happens. Definitely I will run 'iostat -mx 5 100' On that time and also use the command you pointed to see why is consuming so much power. - About the client configuration, we had QUORUM because we were planning to have another data center last year (running in the locations of one of our clients) but at the end we postponed that. The configuration is still the same :), thanks for the indication. We used the downgrading policy because of the timeouts, and problems we had in the past with the network. In fact I have not seen in the logs for some months that the downgrading is occurring, so probably is good also to remove It from the configuration. - The secondary index in the cf is definitely a bad decision, taking at the beginning when I start getting familiar with Cassandra. The problem is the cf at this moment have a lot of data, and remodel it will cost some time, so we decide to postpone it. There are some queries which use this index, using materialized views on this cf and other related with it, will solve the problem. But for that, I need to update the cluster ☺ - Good that you mention that LCS will not be a good idea, because I will planning to make a snapshot of that cf and restore the data in our test cluster to see if the LCS compaction will help. It was more a decision based on “I have to try something” than based on arguments ☺ From: Alain RODRIGUEZ [mailto:arodr...@gmail.com] Sent: vrijdag 8 april 2016 12:46 To: user@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes It looks like a complex issue that might worth having a close look at your data model, configurations and machines. It is hard to help you from the mailing list. Yet here are some thoughts, some might be irrelevant or wrong, but some other might point you to your issue, hope we will get lucky there :-): avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle 1,000,000,400,030,00 98,57 Device: rrqm/s wrqm/s r/s w/srMB/swMB/s avgrq-sz avgqu-sz await svctm %util sda 0,00 0,000,000,20 0,00 0,00 8,00 0,000,00 0,00 0,00 sdb 0,00 0,000,000,00 0,00 0,00 0,00 0,000,00 0,00 0,00 sdc 0,00 0,000,000,00 0,00 0,00 0,00 0,000,00 0,00 0,00 sdd 0,00 0,200,000,40 0,00 0,0012,00 0,002,50 2,50 0,10 CPU: - General use: 1 – 4 % - Worst case: 98% .It is when the problem comes, running massive deletes(even in a different machine which is receiving the deletes) or running a repair. First, the cluster is definitely not overloaded. You are having an issue with some nodes from time to time. This looks like an imbalanced cluster. It can be due to some wide rows or bad partition key. Make sure writes are well balanced at any time with the partition you are using and try to spot some warnings about large row compactions in the logs. Yet, I don't think this is what you face as you then should have 2 or 3 nodes going crazy at the same time because of RF (2 or 3). Also, can we have an 'iostat -mx 5 100' on when a node goes mad? An other good troubleshooting tool would be using https://github.com/aragozin/jvm-tools/blob/master/sjk-core/COMMANDS.md#ttop-command. It would be interesting to see what Cassandra threads are consuming the CPU power. This is definitely something I would try on a high load node/time. About the client, some comments, clearly unrelated to your issue, but probably worth it to be told: .setConsistencyLevel(ConsistencyLevel.QUORUM)) [...] .withRetryPolicy(new LoggingRetryPolicy(DowngradingConsistencyRetryPolicy.INSTANCE)) I advice people to never do this. Basically, consistency level means: even in the worst case, I want to make sure that at least (RF / 2) + 1 got the read / write to consider it valid, if not drop the operation. If used for both writes & reads, this provide you a strong and 'immediate' consistency (no locks though, so excepted for some races). Data will always be sent to all the nodes in charge of the token (generally 2 or 3 nodes, depending on RF). Then you say, if I can't have quorum, then go for one. Meaning you prefer availability, rather than consistency. Then, why not use one from the start as the consistency level? I would go for CL ONE or remove the 'DowngradingConsistencyRetryPolicy'. Also, I would go with 'LOCAL_ONE/QUORUM', using Local is not an issue when using only one DC as you do, but avoid some surprises when adding a new DC. If you don't change it, keep it in mind for the day you
Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
ividual bigint, > > idindividualmorph bigint, > > idreferencebuild bigint, > > isinexon boolean, > > isinorf boolean, > > max_length int, > > morphid bigint, > > position int, > > qualityflag int, > > ranking int, > > referencebuildlength int, > > snpsearchid uuid, > > synonymous boolean, > > PRIMARY KEY ((idline1, idline2, partid), id) > > ) WITH CLUSTERING ORDER BY (id ASC) > > AND bloom_filter_fp_chance = 0.01 > > AND caching = 'KEYS_ONLY' > > AND comment = 'Table with the snp between lines' > > AND compaction = {'class': > 'org.apache.cassandra.db.compaction.SizeTieredCompactionStrategy'} > >AND compression = {'sstable_compression': > 'org.apache.cassandra.io.compress.LZ4Compressor'} > > AND dclocal_read_repair_chance = 0.0 > > AND default_time_to_live = 0 > > AND gc_grace_seconds = 864000 > > AND index_interval = 128 > > AND memtable_flush_period_in_ms = 0 > > AND populate_io_cache_on_flush = false > > AND read_repair_chance = 0.1 > > AND replicate_on_write = true > > AND speculative_retry = '99.0PERCENTILE'; > > CREATE INDEX snpsearch_morphid ON snpaware.snpsearch (morphid); > > > > Which holds a lot of data. It is normaly a cf which needs to be readed but > sometimes updated and deleted and I think the problem is there. I wanted to > change the compaction strategy but that means that a compaction will be > executed and then timeouts will appear and I can not do that on the live > cluster right now. > > > > I will try bring a snapshot of the cf to a test cluster and test the > repair there (I can not snaphost the data from the live cluster completely > because it does not fit in our test cluster). Following your recommendation > I will postpone the upgrade of the cluster (but the partial repair in > version 2.1 looks a good fit for my situation to decrease the pressure on > the nodes when running compactions). > > > > Anyway I have ordered two new nodes, because maybe that will help. The > problem is that adding a new node will need to run clean up in all nodes, > the clean up implies a compaction? If the answer to this is yes, then the > timeouts will appear again. > > > > > > *From:* Alain RODRIGUEZ [mailto:arodr...@gmail.com] > *Sent:* dinsdag 5 april 2016 15:11 > > *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org > *Subject:* Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive > deletes > > > > Over use the cluster was one thing which I was thinking about, and I > have requested two new nodes (anyway it was something already planned). But > the pattern of nodes with high CPU load is only visible in 1 or two of the > nodes, the rest are working correctly. That made me think that adding two > new nodes maybe will not help. > > > > Well, then you could trying to replace this node as soon as you have more > nodes available. I would use this procedure as I believe it is the most > efficient one: > http://docs.datastax.com/en/cassandra/2.0/cassandra/operations/ops_replace_node_t.html > . > > > > Yet I believe it might not be a hardware or cluster throughput issue, and > if it is a hardware issues you probably want to dig it as this machine is > yours and not a virtual one. You might want to reuse it anyway. > > > > Some questions about the machine and their usage. > > > > Disk: > > What disk hardware and configuration do you use. > > iostat -mx 5 100 gives you? How is iowait? > > Any error in the system / kernel logs? > > > > CPU > > How much used are the CPUs in general / worst cases? > > What is the load average / max and how many cores have the cpu? > > > > RAM > > You are using 10GB heap and CMS right? You seems to say that GC activity > looks ok, can you confirm? > > How much total RAM are the machines using? > > > > The point here is to see if we can spot the bottleneck. If there is none, > Cassandra is probably badly configured at some point. > > > > when running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes > > > > Run the deletes at slower at constant path sounds good and definitely I > will try that. > > > > Are clients and queries well configured to use all the nodes evenly? Are > deletes well balanced also? If not, balancing the usage of the nodes will > probably alleviate things. > > > > The update of Cassandra is a good point but I am afraid that if I start > the updates right now the timeouts problems will appear again. During an
RE: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
interval = 128 AND memtable_flush_period_in_ms = 0 AND populate_io_cache_on_flush = false AND read_repair_chance = 0.1 AND replicate_on_write = true AND speculative_retry = '99.0PERCENTILE'; CREATE INDEX snpsearch_morphid ON snpaware.snpsearch (morphid); Which holds a lot of data. It is normaly a cf which needs to be readed but sometimes updated and deleted and I think the problem is there. I wanted to change the compaction strategy but that means that a compaction will be executed and then timeouts will appear and I can not do that on the live cluster right now. I will try bring a snapshot of the cf to a test cluster and test the repair there (I can not snaphost the data from the live cluster completely because it does not fit in our test cluster). Following your recommendation I will postpone the upgrade of the cluster (but the partial repair in version 2.1 looks a good fit for my situation to decrease the pressure on the nodes when running compactions). Anyway I have ordered two new nodes, because maybe that will help. The problem is that adding a new node will need to run clean up in all nodes, the clean up implies a compaction? If the answer to this is yes, then the timeouts will appear again. From: Alain RODRIGUEZ [mailto:arodr...@gmail.com] Sent: dinsdag 5 april 2016 15:11 To: user@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes Over use the cluster was one thing which I was thinking about, and I have requested two new nodes (anyway it was something already planned). But the pattern of nodes with high CPU load is only visible in 1 or two of the nodes, the rest are working correctly. That made me think that adding two new nodes maybe will not help. Well, then you could trying to replace this node as soon as you have more nodes available. I would use this procedure as I believe it is the most efficient one: http://docs.datastax.com/en/cassandra/2.0/cassandra/operations/ops_replace_node_t.html. Yet I believe it might not be a hardware or cluster throughput issue, and if it is a hardware issues you probably want to dig it as this machine is yours and not a virtual one. You might want to reuse it anyway. Some questions about the machine and their usage. Disk: What disk hardware and configuration do you use. iostat -mx 5 100 gives you? How is iowait? Any error in the system / kernel logs? CPU How much used are the CPUs in general / worst cases? What is the load average / max and how many cores have the cpu? RAM You are using 10GB heap and CMS right? You seems to say that GC activity looks ok, can you confirm? How much total RAM are the machines using? The point here is to see if we can spot the bottleneck. If there is none, Cassandra is probably badly configured at some point. when running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes Run the deletes at slower at constant path sounds good and definitely I will try that. Are clients and queries well configured to use all the nodes evenly? Are deletes well balanced also? If not, balancing the usage of the nodes will probably alleviate things. The update of Cassandra is a good point but I am afraid that if I start the updates right now the timeouts problems will appear again. During an update compactions are executed? If it is not I think is safe to update the cluster. I do not recommend you to upgrade right now indeed. Yet I would do it asap (= as soon as the cluster is ready and clients are compatible with the new version). You should always start operations with an healthy cluster or you might end in a worst situation. Compactions will run normally. Make sure not to run any streaming process (repairs / bootstrap / node removal) during the upgrade and while you have not yet run "nodetool upgradesstable". There is a lot of informations out there about upgrades. C*heers, --- Alain Rodriguez - al...@thelastpickle.com<mailto:al...@thelastpickle.com> France The Last Pickle - Apache Cassandra Consulting http://www.thelastpickle.com 2016-04-05 10:32 GMT+02:00 Paco Trujillo mailto:f.truji...@genetwister.nl>>: Hi daemeon We have check network and it is ok, in fact the nodes are connecting between themselves with a dedicated network. From: daemeon reiydelle [mailto:daeme...@gmail.com<mailto:daeme...@gmail.com>] Sent: maandag 4 april 2016 18:42 To: user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org> Subject: Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes Network issues. Could be jumbo frames not consistent or other. sent from my mobile sent from my mobile Daemeon C.M. Reiydelle USA 415.501.0198 London +44.0.20.8144.9872 On Apr 4, 2016 5:34 AM, "Paco Trujillo" mailto:f.truji...@genetwister.nl>> wrote: Hi everyone We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when running “massive deletes”
Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
> > Over use the cluster was one thing which I was thinking about, and I > have requested two new nodes (anyway it was something already planned). But > the pattern of nodes with high CPU load is only visible in 1 or two of the > nodes, the rest are working correctly. That made me think that adding two > new nodes maybe will not help. > Well, then you could trying to replace this node as soon as you have more nodes available. I would use this procedure as I believe it is the most efficient one: http://docs.datastax.com/en/cassandra/2.0/cassandra/operations/ops_replace_node_t.html . Yet I believe it might not be a hardware or cluster throughput issue, and if it is a hardware issues you probably want to dig it as this machine is yours and not a virtual one. You might want to reuse it anyway. Some questions about the machine and their usage. Disk: What disk hardware and configuration do you use. iostat -mx 5 100 gives you? How is iowait? Any error in the system / kernel logs? CPU How much used are the CPUs in general / worst cases? What is the load average / max and how many cores have the cpu? RAM You are using 10GB heap and CMS right? You seems to say that GC activity looks ok, can you confirm? How much total RAM are the machines using? The point here is to see if we can spot the bottleneck. If there is none, Cassandra is probably badly configured at some point. when running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes > Run the deletes at slower at constant path sounds good and definitely I > will try that. Are clients and queries well configured to use all the nodes evenly? Are deletes well balanced also? If not, balancing the usage of the nodes will probably alleviate things. The update of Cassandra is a good point but I am afraid that if I start the > updates right now the timeouts problems will appear again. During an update > compactions are executed? If it is not I think is safe to update the > cluster. I do not recommend you to upgrade right now indeed. Yet I would do it asap (= as soon as the cluster is ready and clients are compatible with the new version). You should always start operations with an healthy cluster or you might end in a worst situation. Compactions will run normally. Make sure not to run any streaming process (repairs / bootstrap / node removal) during the upgrade and while you have not yet run "nodetool upgradesstable". There is a lot of informations out there about upgrades. C*heers, --- Alain Rodriguez - al...@thelastpickle.com France The Last Pickle - Apache Cassandra Consulting http://www.thelastpickle.com 2016-04-05 10:32 GMT+02:00 Paco Trujillo : > Hi daemeon > > > > We have check network and it is ok, in fact the nodes are connecting > between themselves with a dedicated network. > > > > *From:* daemeon reiydelle [mailto:daeme...@gmail.com] > *Sent:* maandag 4 april 2016 18:42 > *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org > *Subject:* Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive > deletes > > > > Network issues. Could be jumbo frames not consistent or other. > > sent from my mobile > > sent from my mobile > Daemeon C.M. Reiydelle > USA 415.501.0198 > London +44.0.20.8144.9872 > > On Apr 4, 2016 5:34 AM, "Paco Trujillo" wrote: > > Hi everyone > > > > We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when > running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes (via cql command line). At > the beginning everything is fine, but after a while we start getting > constant NoHostAvailableException using the datastax driver: > > > > Caused by: com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.NoHostAvailableException: > All host(s) tried for query failed (tried: /172.31.7.243:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.245:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.246:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.247:9042, /172.31.7.232:9042, / > 172.31.7.233:9042, /172.31.7.244:9042 [only showing errors of first 3 > hosts, use getErrors() for more details]) > > > > > > All the nodes are running: > > > > UN 172.31.7.244 152.21 GB 256 14.5% > 58abea69-e7ba-4e57-9609-24f3673a7e58 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.245 168.4 GB 256 14.5% > bc11b4f0-cf96-4ca5-9a3e-33cc2b92a752 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.246 177.71 GB 256 13.7% > 8dc7bb3d-
RE: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
Hi daemeon We have check network and it is ok, in fact the nodes are connecting between themselves with a dedicated network. From: daemeon reiydelle [mailto:daeme...@gmail.com] Sent: maandag 4 april 2016 18:42 To: user@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes Network issues. Could be jumbo frames not consistent or other. sent from my mobile sent from my mobile Daemeon C.M. Reiydelle USA 415.501.0198 London +44.0.20.8144.9872 On Apr 4, 2016 5:34 AM, "Paco Trujillo" mailto:f.truji...@genetwister.nl>> wrote: Hi everyone We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes (via cql command line). At the beginning everything is fine, but after a while we start getting constant NoHostAvailableException using the datastax driver: Caused by: com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.NoHostAvailableException: All host(s) tried for query failed (tried: /172.31.7.243:9042<http://172.31.7.243:9042> (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.245:9042<http://172.31.7.245:9042> (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.246:9042<http://172.31.7.246:9042> (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.247:9042<http://172.31.7.247:9042>, /172.31.7.232:9042<http://172.31.7.232:9042>, /172.31.7.233:9042<http://172.31.7.233:9042>, /172.31.7.244:9042<http://172.31.7.244:9042> [only showing errors of first 3 hosts, use getErrors() for more details]) All the nodes are running: UN 172.31.7.244 152.21 GB 256 14.5% 58abea69-e7ba-4e57-9609-24f3673a7e58 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.245 168.4 GB 256 14.5% bc11b4f0-cf96-4ca5-9a3e-33cc2b92a752 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.246 177.71 GB 256 13.7% 8dc7bb3d-38f7-49b9-b8db-a622cc80346c RAC1 UN 172.31.7.247 158.57 GB 256 14.1% 94022081-a563-4042-81ab-75ffe4d13194 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.243 176.83 GB 256 14.6% 0dda3410-db58-42f2-9351-068bdf68f530 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.233 159 GB 256 13.6% 01e013fb-2f57-44fb-b3c5-fd89d705bfdd RAC1 UN 172.31.7.232 166.05 GB 256 15.0% 4d009603-faa9-4add-b3a2-fe24ec16a7c1 but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am running a lot of deletes using cqlsh in that node. I know that deletes generate tombstones, but with 7 nodes in the cluster I do not think is normal that all the host are not accesible. We have a replication factor of 3 and for the deletes I am not using any consistency (so it is using the default ONE). I check the nodes which a lot of CPU (near 96%) and th gc activity remains on 1.6% (using only 3 GB from the 10 which have assigned). But looking at the thread pool stats, the mutation stages pending column grows without stop, could be that the problem? I cannot find the reason that originates the timeouts. I already have increased the timeouts, but It do not think that is a solution because the timeouts indicated another type of error. Anyone have a tip to try to determine where is the problem? Thanks in advance
RE: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
Hi Alain - Over use the cluster was one thing which I was thinking about, and I have requested two new nodes (anyway it was something already planned). But the pattern of nodes with high CPU load is only visible in 1 or two of the nodes, the rest are working correctly. That made me think that adding two new nodes maybe will not help. - Run the deletes at slower at constant path sounds good and definitely I will try that. Anyway I have similar errors during the weekly repair, even without the deletes running. - Our cluster is inhouse one, each machine ois only use as a Cassandra node. - Logs are quite normal, even when the timeouts start to appear on the client. - The update of Cassandra is a good point but I am afraid that if I start the updates right now the timeouts problems will appear again. During an update compactions are executed? If it is not I think is safe to update the cluster. Thanks for your comments From: Alain RODRIGUEZ [mailto:arodr...@gmail.com] Sent: maandag 4 april 2016 18:35 To: user@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes Hola Paco, the mutation stages pending column grows without stop, could be that the problem CPU (near 96%) Yes, basically I think you are over using this cluster. but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am running a lot of deletes using cqlsh in that node. Solutions would be to run delete at a slower & constant path, against all the nodes, using a balancing policy or adding capacity if all the nodes are facing the issue and you can't slow deletes. You should also have a look at iowait and steal, see if CPU are really used 100% or masking an other issue. (disk not answering fast enough or hardware / shared instance issue). I had some noisy neighbours at some point while using Cassandra on AWS. I cannot find the reason that originates the timeouts. I don't see it that weird while being overusing some/all the nodes. I already have increased the timeouts, but It do not think that is a solution because the timeouts indicated another type of error Any relevant logs in Cassandra nodes (other than dropped mutations INFO)? 7 nodes version 2.0.17 Note: Be aware that this Cassandra version is quite old and no longer supported. Plus you might face issues that were solved already. I know that upgrading is not straight forward, but 2.0 --> 2.1 brings an amazing set of optimisations and some fixes too. You should try it out :-). C*heers, --- Alain Rodriguez - al...@thelastpickle.com<mailto:al...@thelastpickle.com> France The Last Pickle - Apache Cassandra Consulting http://www.thelastpickle.com 2016-04-04 14:33 GMT+02:00 Paco Trujillo mailto:f.truji...@genetwister.nl>>: Hi everyone We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes (via cql command line). At the beginning everything is fine, but after a while we start getting constant NoHostAvailableException using the datastax driver: Caused by: com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.NoHostAvailableException: All host(s) tried for query failed (tried: /172.31.7.243:9042<http://172.31.7.243:9042> (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.245:9042<http://172.31.7.245:9042> (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.246:9042<http://172.31.7.246:9042> (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.247:9042<http://172.31.7.247:9042>, /172.31.7.232:9042<http://172.31.7.232:9042>, /172.31.7.233:9042<http://172.31.7.233:9042>, /172.31.7.244:9042<http://172.31.7.244:9042> [only showing errors of first 3 hosts, use getErrors() for more details]) All the nodes are running: UN 172.31.7.244 152.21 GB 256 14.5% 58abea69-e7ba-4e57-9609-24f3673a7e58 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.245 168.4 GB 256 14.5% bc11b4f0-cf96-4ca5-9a3e-33cc2b92a752 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.246 177.71 GB 256 13.7% 8dc7bb3d-38f7-49b9-b8db-a622cc80346c RAC1 UN 172.31.7.247 158.57 GB 256 14.1% 94022081-a563-4042-81ab-75ffe4d13194 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.243 176.83 GB 256 14.6% 0dda3410-db58-42f2-9351-068bdf68f530 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.233 159 GB 256 13.6% 01e013fb-2f57-44fb-b3c5-fd89d705bfdd RAC1 UN 172.31.7.232 166.05 GB 256 15.0% 4d009603-faa9-4add-b3a2-fe24ec16a7c1 but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am running a lot of deletes using
Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
Network issues. Could be jumbo frames not consistent or other. sent from my mobile sent from my mobile Daemeon C.M. Reiydelle USA 415.501.0198 London +44.0.20.8144.9872 On Apr 4, 2016 5:34 AM, "Paco Trujillo" wrote: > Hi everyone > > > > We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when > running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes (via cql command line). At > the beginning everything is fine, but after a while we start getting > constant NoHostAvailableException using the datastax driver: > > > > Caused by: com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.NoHostAvailableException: > All host(s) tried for query failed (tried: /172.31.7.243:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.245:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.246:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.247:9042, /172.31.7.232:9042, / > 172.31.7.233:9042, /172.31.7.244:9042 [only showing errors of first 3 > hosts, use getErrors() for more details]) > > > > > > All the nodes are running: > > > > UN 172.31.7.244 152.21 GB 256 14.5% > 58abea69-e7ba-4e57-9609-24f3673a7e58 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.245 168.4 GB 256 14.5% > bc11b4f0-cf96-4ca5-9a3e-33cc2b92a752 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.246 177.71 GB 256 13.7% > 8dc7bb3d-38f7-49b9-b8db-a622cc80346c RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.247 158.57 GB 256 14.1% > 94022081-a563-4042-81ab-75ffe4d13194 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.243 176.83 GB 256 14.6% > 0dda3410-db58-42f2-9351-068bdf68f530 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.233 159 GB 256 13.6% > 01e013fb-2f57-44fb-b3c5-fd89d705bfdd RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.232 166.05 GB 256 15.0% > 4d009603-faa9-4add-b3a2-fe24ec16a7c1 > > > > but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am > running a lot of deletes using cqlsh in that node. > > > > I know that deletes generate tombstones, but with 7 nodes in the cluster I > do not think is normal that all the host are not accesible. > > > > We have a replication factor of 3 and for the deletes I am not using any > consistency (so it is using the default ONE). > > > > I check the nodes which a lot of CPU (near 96%) and th gc activity remains > on 1.6% (using only 3 GB from the 10 which have assigned). But looking at > the thread pool stats, the mutation stages pending column grows without > stop, could be that the problem? > > > > I cannot find the reason that originates the timeouts. I already have > increased the timeouts, but It do not think that is a solution because the > timeouts indicated another type of error. Anyone have a tip to try to > determine where is the problem? > > > > Thanks in advance >
Re: all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
Hola Paco, > the mutation stages pending column grows without stop, could be that the > problem > CPU (near 96%) > Yes, basically I think you are over using this cluster. but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am running > a lot of deletes using cqlsh in that node. > Solutions would be to run delete at a slower & constant path, against all the nodes, using a balancing policy or adding capacity if all the nodes are facing the issue and you can't slow deletes. You should also have a look at iowait and steal, see if CPU are really used 100% or masking an other issue. (disk not answering fast enough or hardware / shared instance issue). I had some noisy neighbours at some point while using Cassandra on AWS. I cannot find the reason that originates the timeouts. I don't see it that weird while being overusing some/all the nodes. I already have increased the timeouts, but It do not think that is a > solution because the timeouts indicated another type of error Any relevant logs in Cassandra nodes (other than dropped mutations INFO)? 7 nodes version 2.0.17 Note: Be aware that this Cassandra version is quite old and no longer supported. Plus you might face issues that were solved already. I know that upgrading is not straight forward, but 2.0 --> 2.1 brings an amazing set of optimisations and some fixes too. You should try it out :-). C*heers, --- Alain Rodriguez - al...@thelastpickle.com France The Last Pickle - Apache Cassandra Consulting http://www.thelastpickle.com 2016-04-04 14:33 GMT+02:00 Paco Trujillo : > Hi everyone > > > > We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when > running “massive deletes” on one of the nodes (via cql command line). At > the beginning everything is fine, but after a while we start getting > constant NoHostAvailableException using the datastax driver: > > > > Caused by: com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.NoHostAvailableException: > All host(s) tried for query failed (tried: /172.31.7.243:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.245:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.246:9042 > (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying > to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number > of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.247:9042, /172.31.7.232:9042, / > 172.31.7.233:9042, /172.31.7.244:9042 [only showing errors of first 3 > hosts, use getErrors() for more details]) > > > > > > All the nodes are running: > > > > UN 172.31.7.244 152.21 GB 256 14.5% > 58abea69-e7ba-4e57-9609-24f3673a7e58 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.245 168.4 GB 256 14.5% > bc11b4f0-cf96-4ca5-9a3e-33cc2b92a752 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.246 177.71 GB 256 13.7% > 8dc7bb3d-38f7-49b9-b8db-a622cc80346c RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.247 158.57 GB 256 14.1% > 94022081-a563-4042-81ab-75ffe4d13194 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.243 176.83 GB 256 14.6% > 0dda3410-db58-42f2-9351-068bdf68f530 RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.233 159 GB 256 13.6% > 01e013fb-2f57-44fb-b3c5-fd89d705bfdd RAC1 > > UN 172.31.7.232 166.05 GB 256 15.0% > 4d009603-faa9-4add-b3a2-fe24ec16a7c1 > > > > but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am > running a lot of deletes using cqlsh in that node. > > > > I know that deletes generate tombstones, but with 7 nodes in the cluster I > do not think is normal that all the host are not accesible. > > > > We have a replication factor of 3 and for the deletes I am not using any > consistency (so it is using the default ONE). > > > > I check the nodes which a lot of CPU (near 96%) and th gc activity remains > on 1.6% (using only 3 GB from the 10 which have assigned). But looking at > the thread pool stats, the mutation stages pending column grows without > stop, could be that the problem? > > > > I cannot find the reason that originates the timeouts. I already have > increased the timeouts, but It do not think that is a solution because the > timeouts indicated another type of error. Anyone have a tip to try to > determine where is the problem? > > > > Thanks in advance >
all the nost are not reacheable when running massive deletes
Hi everyone We are having problems with our cluster (7 nodes version 2.0.17) when running "massive deletes" on one of the nodes (via cql command line). At the beginning everything is fine, but after a while we start getting constant NoHostAvailableException using the datastax driver: Caused by: com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.NoHostAvailableException: All host(s) tried for query failed (tried: /172.31.7.243:9042 (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.245:9042 (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.246:9042 (com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.DriverException: Timeout while trying to acquire available connection (you may want to increase the driver number of per-host connections)), /172.31.7.247:9042, /172.31.7.232:9042, /172.31.7.233:9042, /172.31.7.244:9042 [only showing errors of first 3 hosts, use getErrors() for more details]) All the nodes are running: UN 172.31.7.244 152.21 GB 256 14.5% 58abea69-e7ba-4e57-9609-24f3673a7e58 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.245 168.4 GB 256 14.5% bc11b4f0-cf96-4ca5-9a3e-33cc2b92a752 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.246 177.71 GB 256 13.7% 8dc7bb3d-38f7-49b9-b8db-a622cc80346c RAC1 UN 172.31.7.247 158.57 GB 256 14.1% 94022081-a563-4042-81ab-75ffe4d13194 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.243 176.83 GB 256 14.6% 0dda3410-db58-42f2-9351-068bdf68f530 RAC1 UN 172.31.7.233 159 GB 256 13.6% 01e013fb-2f57-44fb-b3c5-fd89d705bfdd RAC1 UN 172.31.7.232 166.05 GB 256 15.0% 4d009603-faa9-4add-b3a2-fe24ec16a7c1 but two of them have high cpu load, especially the 232 because I am running a lot of deletes using cqlsh in that node. I know that deletes generate tombstones, but with 7 nodes in the cluster I do not think is normal that all the host are not accesible. We have a replication factor of 3 and for the deletes I am not using any consistency (so it is using the default ONE). I check the nodes which a lot of CPU (near 96%) and th gc activity remains on 1.6% (using only 3 GB from the 10 which have assigned). But looking at the thread pool stats, the mutation stages pending column grows without stop, could be that the problem? I cannot find the reason that originates the timeouts. I already have increased the timeouts, but It do not think that is a solution because the timeouts indicated another type of error. Anyone have a tip to try to determine where is the problem? Thanks in advance