[ClusterLabs] Upgrade corosync problem
Salvatore D'angelo
sasadangelo at gmail.com
Tue Jun 26 05:03:31 EDT 2018
Yes, sorry you’re right I could find it by myself.
However, I did the following:
1. Added the line you suggested to /etc/fstab
2. mount -o remount /dev/shm
3. Now I correctly see /dev/shm of 512M with df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
overlay 63G 11G 49G 19% /
tmpfs 64M 4.0K 64M 1% /dev
tmpfs 1000M 0 1000M 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
osxfs 466G 158G 305G 35% /Users
/dev/sda1 63G 11G 49G 19% /etc/hosts
shm 512M 15M 498M 3% /dev/shm
tmpfs 1000M 0 1000M 0% /sys/firmware
tmpfs 128M 0 128M 0% /tmp
The errors in log went away. Consider that I remove the log file before start corosync so it does not contains lines of previous executions.
But the command:
corosync-quorumtool -ps
still give:
Cannot initialize QUORUM service
Consider that few minutes before it gave me the message:
Cannot initialize CFG service
I do not know the differences between CFG and QUORUM in this case.
If I try to start pacemaker the service is OK but I see only pacemaker and the Transport does not work if I try to run a cam command.
Any suggestion?
> On 26 Jun 2018, at 10:49, Christine Caulfield <ccaulfie at redhat.com> wrote:
>
> On 26/06/18 09:40, Salvatore D'angelo wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Yes,
>>
>> I am reproducing only the required part for test. I think the original
>> system has a larger shm. The problem is that I do not know exactly how
>> to change it.
>> I tried the following steps, but I have the impression I didn’t
>> performed the right one:
>>
>> 1. remove everything under /tmp
>> 2. Added the following line to /etc/fstab
>> tmpfs /tmp tmpfs defaults,nodev,nosuid,mode=1777,size=128M
>> 0 0
>> 3. mount /tmp
>> 4. df -h
>> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
>> overlay 63G 11G 49G 19% /
>> tmpfs 64M 4.0K 64M 1% /dev
>> tmpfs 1000M 0 1000M 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
>> osxfs 466G 158G 305G 35% /Users
>> /dev/sda1 63G 11G 49G 19% /etc/hosts
>> shm 64M 11M 54M 16% /dev/shm
>> tmpfs 1000M 0 1000M 0% /sys/firmware
>> *tmpfs 128M 0 128M 0% /tmp*
>>
>> The errors are exactly the same.
>> I have the impression that I changed the wrong parameter. Probably I
>> have to change:
>> shm 64M 11M 54M 16% /dev/shm
>>
>> but I do not know how to do that. Any suggestion?
>>
>
> According to google, you just add a new line to /etc/fstab for /dev/shm
>
> tmpfs /dev/shm tmpfs defaults,size=512m 0 0
>
> Chrissie
>
>>> On 26 Jun 2018, at 09:48, Christine Caulfield <ccaulfie at redhat.com <mailto:ccaulfie at redhat.com>
>>> <mailto:ccaulfie at redhat.com <mailto:ccaulfie at redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 25/06/18 20:41, Salvatore D'angelo wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> Let me add here one important detail. I use Docker for my test with 5
>>>> containers deployed on my Mac.
>>>> Basically the team that worked on this project installed the cluster
>>>> on soft layer bare metal.
>>>> The PostgreSQL cluster was hard to test and if a misconfiguration
>>>> occurred recreate the cluster from scratch is not easy.
>>>> Test it was a cumbersome if you consider that we access to the
>>>> machines with a complex system hard to describe here.
>>>> For this reason I ported the cluster on Docker for test purpose. I am
>>>> not interested to have it working for months, I just need a proof of
>>>> concept.
>>>>
>>>> When the migration works I’ll port everything on bare metal where the
>>>> size of resources are ambundant.
>>>>
>>>> Now I have enough RAM and disk space on my Mac so if you tell me what
>>>> should be an acceptable size for several days of running it is ok for me.
>>>> It is ok also have commands to clean the shm when required.
>>>> I know I can find them on Google but if you can suggest me these info
>>>> I’ll appreciate. I have OS knowledge to do that but I would like to
>>>> avoid days of guesswork and try and error if possible.
>>>
>>>
>>> I would recommend at least 128MB of space on /dev/shm, 256MB if you can
>>> spare it. My 'standard' system uses 75MB under normal running allowing
>>> for one command-line query to run.
>>>
>>> If I read this right then you're reproducing a bare-metal system in
>>> containers now? so the original systems will have a default /dev/shm
>>> size which is probably much larger than your containers?
>>>
>>> I'm just checking here that we don't have a regression in memory usage
>>> as Poki suggested.
>>>
>>> Chrissie
>>>
>>>>> On 25 Jun 2018, at 21:18, Jan Pokorný <jpokorny at redhat.com <mailto:jpokorny at redhat.com>
>>>>> <mailto:jpokorny at redhat.com <mailto:jpokorny at redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> On 25/06/18 19:06 +0200, Salvatore D'angelo wrote:
>>>>>> Thanks for reply. I scratched my cluster and created it again and
>>>>>> then migrated as before. This time I uninstalled pacemaker,
>>>>>> corosync, crmsh and resource agents with make uninstall
>>>>>>
>>>>>> then I installed new packages. The problem is the same, when
>>>>>> I launch:
>>>>>> corosync-quorumtool -ps
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I got: Cannot initialize QUORUM service
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Here the log with debug enabled:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> [18019] pg3 corosyncerror [QB ] couldn't create circular mmap
>>>>>> on /dev/shm/qb-cfg-event-18020-18028-23-data
>>>>>> [18019] pg3 corosyncerror [QB ]
>>>>>> qb_rb_open:cfg-event-18020-18028-23: Resource temporarily
>>>>>> unavailable (11)
>>>>>> [18019] pg3 corosyncdebug [QB ] Free'ing ringbuffer:
>>>>>> /dev/shm/qb-cfg-request-18020-18028-23-header
>>>>>> [18019] pg3 corosyncdebug [QB ] Free'ing ringbuffer:
>>>>>> /dev/shm/qb-cfg-response-18020-18028-23-header
>>>>>> [18019] pg3 corosyncerror [QB ] shm connection FAILED:
>>>>>> Resource temporarily unavailable (11)
>>>>>> [18019] pg3 corosyncerror [QB ] Error in connection setup
>>>>>> (18020-18028-23): Resource temporarily unavailable (11)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I tried to check /dev/shm and I am not sure these are the right
>>>>>> commands, however:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> df -h /dev/shm
>>>>>> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
>>>>>> shm 64M 16M 49M 24% /dev/shm
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ls /dev/shm
>>>>>> qb-cmap-request-18020-18036-25-data qb-corosync-blackbox-data
>>>>>> qb-quorum-request-18020-18095-32-data
>>>>>> qb-cmap-request-18020-18036-25-header qb-corosync-blackbox-header
>>>>>> qb-quorum-request-18020-18095-32-header
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Is 64 Mb enough for /dev/shm. If no, why it worked with previous
>>>>>> corosync release?
>>>>>
>>>>> For a start, can you try configuring corosync with
>>>>> --enable-small-memory-footprint switch?
>>>>>
>>>>> Hard to say why the space provisioned to /dev/shm is the direct
>>>>> opposite of generous (per today's standards), but may be the result
>>>>> of automatic HW adaptation, and if RAM is so scarce in your case,
>>>>> the above build-time toggle might help.
>>>>>
>>>>> If not, then exponentially increasing size of /dev/shm space is
>>>>> likely your best bet (I don't recommended fiddling with mlockall()
>>>>> and similar measures in corosync).
>>>>>
>>>>> Of course, feel free to raise a regression if you have a reproducible
>>>>> comparison between two corosync (plus possibly different libraries
>>>>> like libqb) versions, one that works and one that won't, in
>>>>> reproducible conditions (like this small /dev/shm, VM image, etc.).
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Jan (Poki)
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