4 Troubleshooting OSDs #
Before troubleshooting your OSDs, check your monitors and network first. If
you execute ceph health
or ceph -s
on
the command line and Ceph returns a health status, it means that the
monitors have a quorum. If you do not have a monitor quorum or if there are
errors with the monitor status, see
Chapter 6, Troubleshooting Ceph Monitors and Ceph Managers. Check your networks to ensure
they are running properly, because networks may have a significant impact on
OSD operation and performance.
4.1 Obtain OSD data #
To begin troubleshooting the OSDs, obtain any information including the information collected from 12.9項 「OSDと配置グループの監視」.
4.1.1 Finding Ceph logs #
If you have not changed the default path, you can find Ceph log files at
/var/log/ceph
:
cephuser@adm >
ls /var/log/ceph
If you do not get enough detail, change your logging level. See Chapter 2, Troubleshooting logging and debugging for more information.
4.1.2 Using the admin socket tool #
Use the admin socket tool to retrieve runtime information. For details, list the sockets for your Ceph processes:
cephuser@adm >
ls /var/run/ceph
Execute the following:
cephuser@adm >
ceph daemon DAEMON-NAME help
Alternatively, specify a SOCKET-FILE
:
cephuser@adm >
ceph daemon SOCKET-FILE help
The admin socket, among other things, allows you to:
List your configuration at runtime
Dump historic operations
Dump the operation priority queue state
Dump operations in flight
Dump perfcounters
4.1.3 Displaying freespace #
Filesystem issues may arise. To display your file system’s free space,
execute df
.
cephuser@adm >
df -h
Execute df --help
for additional usage.
4.1.4 Identifying I/O statistics #
Use iostat to identify I/O-related issues.
cephuser@adm >
iostat -x
4.1.5 Retrieving diagnostic messages #
To retrieve diagnostic messages, use dmesg
with
less
, more
, grep
or
tail
. For example:
cephuser@adm >
dmesg | grep scsi
4.2 Stopping without rebalancing #
Periodically you may need to perform maintenance on a subset of your cluster
or resolve a problem that affects a failure domain. If you do not want CRUSH
to automatically rebalance the cluster as you stop OSDs for maintenance, set
the cluster to noout
first:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd set noout
Once the cluster is set to noout
, you can begin stopping
the OSDs within the failure domain that requires maintenance work:
cephuser@adm >
ceph orch daemon stop osd.ID
Placement groups within the OSDs you stop will become degraded while you are addressing issues with within the failure domain.
Once you have completed your maintenance, restart the OSDs:
cephuser@adm >
ceph orch daemon start osd.ID
Finally, unset the cluster from noout
:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd unset noout
4.3 OSDs not running #
Under normal circumstances, restarting the ceph-osd
daemon will allow it to rejoin the cluster and recover. If this is not true,
continue on to the next section.
4.3.1 An OSD will not start #
If an OSD will not start when you start your cluster and you are unable to determine the reason, we recommend generating a supportconfig and open a support ticket. For more information, see How do I submit a support case?
4.3.2 Failing OSD #
When a ceph-osd
process dies, the monitor learns about
the failure from surviving ceph-osd
daemons and reports
it via the ceph health
command:
cephuser@adm >
ceph health
HEALTH_WARN 1/3 in osds are down
A warning displays whenever there are ceph-osd
processes
that are marked in
and down
. Identify
which ceph-osd
s are down with:
cephuser@adm >
ceph health detail
HEALTH_WARN 1/3 in osds are down
osd.0 is down since epoch 23, last address 192.168.106.220:6800/11080
If there is a disk failure or other fault preventing
ceph-osd
from functioning or restarting, an error
message should be present in its log file. You can monitor the cephadm
log in real time with the following command:
cephuser@adm >
ceph -W cephadm
You can view the last few messages with:
cephuser@adm >
ceph log last cephadm
If the daemon stopped because of a heartbeat failure, the underlying kernel
file system may be unresponsive. Check dmesg
output for
disk or other kernel errors.
4.3.3 Preventing write action to OSD #
Ceph prevents writing to a full OSD so that you do not lose data. In an
operational cluster, you should receive a warning when your cluster is
getting near its full ratio. The mon osd full ratio
defaults to 0.95, or 95% of capacity before it stops clients from writing
data. The mon osd backfillfull ratio
defaults to 0.90,
or 90% of capacity when it blocks backfills from starting. The OSD nearfull
ratio defaults to 0.85, or 85% of capacity when it generates a health
warning. Change this using the following command:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd set-nearfull-ratio <float[0.0-1.0]>
Full cluster issues usually arise when testing how Ceph handles an OSD
failure on a small cluster. When one node has a high percentage of the
cluster’s data, the cluster can easily eclipse its nearfull and full
ratio immediately. If you are testing how Ceph reacts to OSD failures on
a small cluster, you should leave ample free disk space and consider
temporarily lowering the OSD full ratio
, OSD
backfillfull
ratio and OSD nearfull
ratio
using these commands:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd set-nearfull-ratio <float[0.0-1.0]>cephuser@adm >
ceph osd set-full-ratio <float[0.0-1.0]>cephuser@adm >
ceph osd set-backfillfull-ratio <float[0.0-1.0]>
Full ceph-osds
will be reported by ceph
health
:
cephuser@adm >
ceph health
HEALTH_WARN 1 nearfull osd(s)
Or:
cephuser@adm >
ceph health detail
HEALTH_ERR 1 full osd(s); 1 backfillfull osd(s); 1 nearfull osd(s)
osd.3 is full at 97%
osd.4 is backfill full at 91%
osd.2 is near full at 87%
We recommend adding new ceph-osds
to deal with a full
cluster, allowing the cluster to redistribute data to the newly available
storage. If you cannot start an OSD because it is full, you may delete some
data by deleting some placement group directories in the full OSD.
If you choose to delete a placement group directory on a full OSD, do not delete the same placement group directory on another full OSD, or you may loose data. You must maintain at least one copy of your data on at least one OSD.
4.4 Unresponsive or slow OSDs #
A commonly recurring issue involves slow or unresponsive OSDs. Ensure that you have eliminated other troubleshooting possibilities before delving into OSD performance issues. For example, ensure that your network(s) is working properly and your OSDs are running. Check to see if OSDs are throttling recovery traffic.
4.4.1 Identifying bad sectors and fragmented disks #
Check your disks for bad sectors and fragmentation. This can cause total throughput to drop substantially.
4.4.2 Co-resident monitors and OSDs #
Monitors are generally light-weight processes but often perform fsync(). This can interfere with other workloads, particularly if monitors run on the same drive as the OSDs. Additionally, if you run monitors on the same host as the OSDs, you may incur performance issues related to:
Running an older kernel (pre-3.0)
Running a kernel with no syncfs(2) syscall.
In these cases, multiple OSDs running on the same host can drag each other down by doing lots of commits. That often leads to the bursty writes.
4.4.3 Co-resident processes #
Spinning up co-resident processes such as a cloud-based solution, virtual machines and other applications that write data to Ceph while operating on the same hardware as OSDs can introduce significant OSD latency. We recommend optimizing a host for use with Ceph and using other hosts for other processes. The practice of separating Ceph operations from other applications may help improve performance and may streamline troubleshooting and maintenance.
4.4.4 Logging levels #
If you turned logging levels up to track an issue and then forgot to turn
logging levels back down, the OSD may be putting a lot of logs onto the
disk. If you intend to keep logging levels high, you may consider mounting
a drive to the default path for logging. For example,
/var/log/ceph/$cluster-$name.log
.
4.4.5 Recovery throttling #
Depending upon your configuration, Ceph may reduce recovery rates to maintain performance or it may increase recovery rates to the point that recovery impacts OSD performance. Check to see if the OSD is recovering.
4.4.6 Kernel version #
Check the kernel version you are running. Older kernels may not receive new backports that Ceph depends upon for better performance.
4.4.7 Kernel issues with syncfs #
Try running one OSD per host to see if performance improves. Old kernels
might not have a recent enough version of glibc to support
syncfs(2)
.
4.4.8 Filesystem issues #
Currently, we recommend deploying clusters with XFS.
4.4.9 Insufficient RAM #
We recommend 1.5 GB of RAM per TB of raw OSD capacity for each Object Storage Node. You may notice that during normal operations, the OSD only uses a fraction of that amount. Unused RAM makes it tempting to use the excess RAM for co-resident applications, VMs and so forth. However, when OSDs go into recovery mode, their memory utilization spikes. If there is no RAM available, the OSD performance will slow considerably.
4.4.10 Complaining about old or slow requests #
If a ceph-osd
daemon is slow to respond to a request,
log messages will generate complaining about requests that are taking too
long. The warning threshold defaults to 30 seconds, and is configurable via
the osd op complaint time
option. When this happens, the
cluster log receives messages. Legacy versions of Ceph complain about old
requests:
osd.0 192.168.106.220:6800/18813 312 : [WRN] old request \ osd_op(client.5099.0:790 fatty_26485_object789 [write 0~4096] 2.5e54f643) \ v4 received at 2012-03-06 15:42:56.054801 currently waiting for sub ops
Newer versions of Ceph complain about slow requests
:
{date} {osd.num} [WRN] 1 slow requests, 1 included below; oldest blocked for > 30.005692 secs {date} {osd.num} [WRN] slow request 30.005692 seconds old, received at \ {date-time}: osd_op(client.4240.0:8 benchmark_data_ceph-1_39426_object7 \ [write 0~4194304] 0.69848840) v4 currently waiting for subops from [610]
Possible causes include:
A bad drive (check
dmesg
output)A bug in the kernel file system (check
dmesg
output)An overloaded cluster (check system load, iostat, etc.)
A bug in the
ceph-osd
daemon.
Possible solutions:
Remove VMs from Ceph hosts
Upgrade kernel
Upgrade Ceph
Restart OSDs
4.4.11 Debugging slow requests #
If you run ceph daemon osd.<id> dump_historic_ops
or
ceph daemon osd.<id> dump_ops_in_flight
, you see a
set of operations and a list of events each operation went through. These
are briefly described below.
Events from the Messenger layer:
header_read
When the messenger first started reading the message off the wire.
throttled
When the messenger tried to acquire memory throttle space to read the message into memory.
all_read
When the messenger finished reading the message off the wire.
dispatched
When the messenger gave the message to the OSD.
initiated
This is identical to
header_read
. The existence of both is a historical oddity.
Events from the OSD as it prepares operations:
queued_for_pg
The op has been put into the queue for processing by its PG.
reached_pg
The PG has started doing the op.
waiting for \*
The op is waiting for some other work to complete before it can proceed (e.g. a new OSDMap; for its object target to scrub; for the PG to finish peering; all as specified in the message).
started
The op has been accepted as something the OSD should do and is now being performed.
waiting for subops from
The op has been sent to replica OSDs.
Events from the FileStore:
commit_queued_for_journal_write:
The op has been given to the FileStore.
write_thread_in_journal_buffer
The op is in the journal’s buffer and waiting to be persisted (as the next disk write).
journaled_completion_queued
The op was journaled to disk and its callback queued for invocation.
Events from the OSD after stuff has been given to local disk:
op_commit
The op has been committed by the primary OSD.
op_applied
The op has been
write()’en
to the backing FS on the primary.sub_op_applied: op_applied
For a replica’s “subop”.
sub_op_committed: op_commit
For a replica’s sub-op (only for EC pools).
sub_op_commit_rec/sub_op_apply_rec from <X>
The primary marks this when it hears about the above, but for a particular replica (i.e. <X>).
commit_sent
We sent a reply back to the client (or primary OSD, for sub ops).
Many of these events are seemingly redundant, but cross important boundaries in the internal code (such as passing data across locks into new threads).
4.5 OSD weight is 0 #
When OSD starts, it is assigned a weight. The higher the weight, the bigger the chance that the cluster writes data to the OSD. The weight is either specified in a cluster CRUSH Map, or calculated by the OSDs' start-up script.
4.6 OSD is down #
OSD daemon is either running, or stopped/down. There are 3 general reasons why an OSD is down:
Hard disk failure.
The OSD crashed.
The server crashed.
You can see the detailed status of OSDs by running
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd tree
# id weight type name up/down reweight
-1 0.02998 root default
-2 0.009995 host doc-ceph1
0 0.009995 osd.0 up 1
-3 0.009995 host doc-ceph2
1 0.009995 osd.1 up 1
-4 0.009995 host doc-ceph3
2 0.009995 osd.2 down
The example listing shows that the osd.2
is down. Then
you may check if the disk where the OSD is located is mounted:
#
lsblk -f
NAME FSTYPE LABEL UUID FSAVAIL FSUSE% MOUNTPOINT
vda
├─vda1
├─vda2 vfat EFI 7BDD-40C3 18.8M 6% /boot/efi
└─vda3 ext4 ROOT 144d3eec-c193-4793-b6a9-1ac295259f4b 36.7G 5% /
vdb LVM2_member Fj8nlY-Dnmm-8Y0w-tJrO-8rAe-SUTH-lA2Ux2
└─ceph--6dc6f71f--ff02--4316--b145--c7804d5fb2f4-osd--block--2cb16f65--c87d--405d--a913--4e4ea6037ca1
vdc LVM2_member 0101m1-mc83-K8ce-j4Dv-yxUO-5KPj-6FpuSu
└─ceph--1082eac0--4478--48cf--b8ab--4d3a62ca1c27-osd--data--185c9dd6--ce28--4b98--a9b6--9d5b1f444a4f
vdd LVM2_member wqE8sC-w5mx-J9t1-FoM1-vIRC-0xxq-5FPyuL
└─ceph--9e71d81a--e394--49b7--bef9--b639083be779-osd--data--eb94f8e6--af6d--4ef6--911b--7f44f7484c85
You can track the reason why the OSD is down by inspecting its log file. See
Section 4.3.2, “Failing OSD” for instructions on how to source
the log files. After you find and fix the reason why the OSD is not running,
start it with the following command. To identify the unique FSID of the
cluster, run ceph fsid
. To identify the Object Gateway daemon
name, run ceph orch ps ---hostname
HOSTNAME
.
#
systemctl start ceph-FSID@osd.2
Do not forget to replace 2
with the actual number of your
stopped OSD.
4.7 Finding slow OSDs #
When tuning the cluster performance, it is very important to identify slow storage/OSDs within the cluster. The reason is that if the data is written to the slow(est) disk, the complete write operation slows down as it always waits until it is finished on all the related disks.
It is not trivial to locate the storage bottleneck. You need to examine each and every OSD to find out the ones slowing down the write process. To do a benchmark on a single OSD, run:
ceph tell
osd.OSD_ID_NUMBER bench
For example:
cephuser@adm >
ceph tell osd.0 bench
{ "bytes_written": 1073741824,
"blocksize": 4194304,
"bytes_per_sec": "19377779.000000"}
Then you need to run this command on each OSD and compare the
bytes_per_sec
value to get the slow(est) OSDs.
4.8 Flapping OSDs #
We recommend using both a public (front-end) network and a cluster (back-end) network so that you can better meet the capacity requirements of object replication. Another advantage is that you can run a cluster network such that it is not connected to the internet, thereby preventing some denial of service attacks. When OSDs peer and check heartbeats, they use the cluster (back-end) network when it’s available.
However, if the cluster (back-end) network fails or develops significant latency while the public (front-end) network operates optimally, OSDs currently do not handle this situation well. What happens is that OSDs mark each other down on the monitor, while marking themselves up. This is called flapping.
If something is causing OSDs to flap (repeatedly getting marked down and then up again), you can force the monitors to stop the flapping with:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd set noup # prevent OSDs from getting marked upcephuser@adm >
ceph osd set nodown # prevent OSDs from getting marked down
These flags are recorded in the osdmap structure:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd dump | grep flags
flags no-up,no-down
You can clear the flags with:
cephuser@adm >
ceph osd unset noupcephuser@adm >
ceph osd unset nodown
Two other flags are supported, noin
and
noout
, which prevent booting OSDs from being marked in
(allocated data) or protect OSDs from eventually being marked out
(regardless of what the current value for mon osd down
out
interval is).
noup
, noout
, and nodown
are temporary in the sense that once the flags are cleared, the action they
were blocking should occur shortly after. The noin
flag,
on the other hand, prevents OSDs from being marked in
on
boot, and any daemons that started while the flag was set will remain that
way.