rnal node)
>
> Thanks,
> Zheng
>
>
> zhengshe...@outlook.com
>
> From: Ted Yu<mailto:yuzhih...@gmail.com>
> Date: 2016-04-01 00:00
> To: user@hbase.apache.org<mailto:user@hbase.apache.org>
> Subject: Re: Could
> Zheng
>
>
> zhengshe...@outlook.com
>
> From: Ted Yu<mailto:yuzhih...@gmail.com>
> Date: 2016-04-01 00:00
> To: user@hbase.apache.org<mailto:user@hbase.apache.org>
> Subject: Re: Could not initialize all stores for the region
>
-01 00:00
To: user@hbase.apache.org<mailto:user@hbase.apache.org>
Subject: Re: Could not initialize all stores for the region
bq. File does not exist: /hbase/data/default/vocabulary/
2639c4d082646bb4a4fa2d8119f9aaef/cnt/2dc367d0e1c24a3b848c68d3b171b06d
Can you search in namenode audit log
bq. File does not exist: /hbase/data/default/vocabulary/
2639c4d082646bb4a4fa2d8119f9aaef/cnt/2dc367d0e1c24a3b848c68d3b171b06d
Can you search in namenode audit log to see which node initiated the delete
request of the above file ?
Then you can search in that node's region server log to get more
By disabling table "vocabulary" and the creating a new table, the hbase is
recovered. Now write operations (not only on the new table but also on other
tables) can performed without any issue.
But I still don't understand what is the root cause, and how HBase lost data
(with it's strong