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1 =========================
2 Monitoring OSDs and PGs
3 =========================
4
5 High availability and high reliability require a fault-tolerant approach to
6 managing hardware and software issues. Ceph has no single point-of-failure, and
7 can service requests for data in a "degraded" mode. Ceph's `data placement`_
8 introduces a layer of indirection to ensure that data doesn't bind directly to
9 particular OSD addresses. This means that tracking down system faults requires
10 finding the `placement group`_ and the underlying OSDs at root of the problem.
11
12 .. tip:: A fault in one part of the cluster may prevent you from accessing a
13 particular object, but that doesn't mean that you cannot access other objects.
14 When you run into a fault, don't panic. Just follow the steps for monitoring
15 your OSDs and placement groups. Then, begin troubleshooting.
16
17 Ceph is generally self-repairing. However, when problems persist, monitoring
18 OSDs and placement groups will help you identify the problem.
19
20
21 Monitoring OSDs
22 ===============
23
24 An OSD's status is either in the cluster (``in``) or out of the cluster
25 (``out``); and, it is either up and running (``up``), or it is down and not
26 running (``down``). If an OSD is ``up``, it may be either ``in`` the cluster
27 (you can read and write data) or it is ``out`` of the cluster. If it was
28 ``in`` the cluster and recently moved ``out`` of the cluster, Ceph will migrate
29 placement groups to other OSDs. If an OSD is ``out`` of the cluster, CRUSH will
30 not assign placement groups to the OSD. If an OSD is ``down``, it should also be
31 ``out``.
32
33 .. note:: If an OSD is ``down`` and ``in``, there is a problem and the cluster
34 will not be in a healthy state.
35
36 .. ditaa::
37
38 +----------------+ +----------------+
39 | | | |
40 | OSD #n In | | OSD #n Up |
41 | | | |
42 +----------------+ +----------------+
43 ^ ^
44 | |
45 | |
46 v v
47 +----------------+ +----------------+
48 | | | |
49 | OSD #n Out | | OSD #n Down |
50 | | | |
51 +----------------+ +----------------+
52
53 If you execute a command such as ``ceph health``, ``ceph -s`` or ``ceph -w``,
54 you may notice that the cluster does not always echo back ``HEALTH OK``. Don't
55 panic. With respect to OSDs, you should expect that the cluster will **NOT**
56 echo ``HEALTH OK`` in a few expected circumstances:
57
58 #. You haven't started the cluster yet (it won't respond).
59 #. You have just started or restarted the cluster and it's not ready yet,
60 because the placement groups are getting created and the OSDs are in
61 the process of peering.
62 #. You just added or removed an OSD.
63 #. You just have modified your cluster map.
64
65 An important aspect of monitoring OSDs is to ensure that when the cluster
66 is up and running that all OSDs that are ``in`` the cluster are ``up`` and
67 running, too. To see if all OSDs are running, execute::
68
69 ceph osd stat
70
71 The result should tell you the total number of OSDs (x),
72 how many are ``up`` (y), how many are ``in`` (z) and the map epoch (eNNNN). ::
73
74 x osds: y up, z in; epoch: eNNNN
75
76 If the number of OSDs that are ``in`` the cluster is more than the number of
77 OSDs that are ``up``, execute the following command to identify the ``ceph-osd``
78 daemons that are not running::
79
80 ceph osd tree
81
82 ::
83
84 #ID CLASS WEIGHT TYPE NAME STATUS REWEIGHT PRI-AFF
85 -1 2.00000 pool openstack
86 -3 2.00000 rack dell-2950-rack-A
87 -2 2.00000 host dell-2950-A1
88 0 ssd 1.00000 osd.0 up 1.00000 1.00000
89 1 ssd 1.00000 osd.1 down 1.00000 1.00000
90
91 .. tip:: The ability to search through a well-designed CRUSH hierarchy may help
92 you troubleshoot your cluster by identifying the physical locations faster.
93
94 If an OSD is ``down``, start it::
95
96 sudo systemctl start ceph-osd@1
97
98 See `OSD Not Running`_ for problems associated with OSDs that stopped, or won't
99 restart.
100
101
102 PG Sets
103 =======
104
105 When CRUSH assigns placement groups to OSDs, it looks at the number of replicas
106 for the pool and assigns the placement group to OSDs such that each replica of
107 the placement group gets assigned to a different OSD. For example, if the pool
108 requires three replicas of a placement group, CRUSH may assign them to
109 ``osd.1``, ``osd.2`` and ``osd.3`` respectively. CRUSH actually seeks a
110 pseudo-random placement that will take into account failure domains you set in
111 your `CRUSH map`_, so you will rarely see placement groups assigned to nearest
112 neighbor OSDs in a large cluster.
113
114 Ceph processes a client request using the **Acting Set**, which is the set of
115 OSDs that will actually handle the requests since they have a full and working
116 version of a placement group shard. The set of OSDs that should contain a shard
117 of a particular placement group as the **Up Set**, i.e. where data is
118 moved/copied to (or planned to be).
119
120 In some cases, an OSD in the Acting Set is ``down`` or otherwise not able to
121 service requests for objects in the placement group. When these situations
122 arise, don't panic. Common examples include:
123
124 - You added or removed an OSD. Then, CRUSH reassigned the placement group to
125 other OSDs--thereby changing the composition of the Acting Set and spawning
126 the migration of data with a "backfill" process.
127 - An OSD was ``down``, was restarted, and is now ``recovering``.
128 - An OSD in the Acting Set is ``down`` or unable to service requests,
129 and another OSD has temporarily assumed its duties.
130
131 In most cases, the Up Set and the Acting Set are identical. When they are not,
132 it may indicate that Ceph is migrating the PG (it's remapped), an OSD is
133 recovering, or that there is a problem (i.e., Ceph usually echoes a "HEALTH
134 WARN" state with a "stuck stale" message in such scenarios).
135
136 To retrieve a list of placement groups, execute::
137
138 ceph pg dump
139
140 To view which OSDs are within the Acting Set or the Up Set for a given placement
141 group, execute::
142
143 ceph pg map {pg-num}
144
145 The result should tell you the osdmap epoch (eNNN), the placement group number
146 ({pg-num}), the OSDs in the Up Set (up[]), and the OSDs in the acting set
147 (acting[]). ::
148
149 osdmap eNNN pg {raw-pg-num} ({pg-num}) -> up [0,1,2] acting [0,1,2]
150
151 .. note:: If the Up Set and Acting Set do not match, this may be an indicator
152 that the cluster rebalancing itself or of a potential problem with
153 the cluster.
154
155
156 Peering
157 =======
158
159 Before you can write data to a placement group, it must be in an ``active``
160 state, and it **should** be in a ``clean`` state. For Ceph to determine the
161 current state of a placement group, the primary OSD of the placement group
162 (i.e., the first OSD in the acting set), peers with the secondary and tertiary
163 OSDs to establish agreement on the current state of the placement group
164 (assuming a pool with 3 replicas of the PG).
165
166
167 .. ditaa::
168
169 +---------+ +---------+ +-------+
170 | OSD 1 | | OSD 2 | | OSD 3 |
171 +---------+ +---------+ +-------+
172 | | |
173 | Request To | |
174 | Peer | |
175 |-------------->| |
176 |<--------------| |
177 | Peering |
178 | |
179 | Request To |
180 | Peer |
181 |----------------------------->|
182 |<-----------------------------|
183 | Peering |
184
185 The OSDs also report their status to the monitor. See `Configuring Monitor/OSD
186 Interaction`_ for details. To troubleshoot peering issues, see `Peering
187 Failure`_.
188
189
190 Monitoring Placement Group States
191 =================================
192
193 If you execute a command such as ``ceph health``, ``ceph -s`` or ``ceph -w``,
194 you may notice that the cluster does not always echo back ``HEALTH OK``. After
195 you check to see if the OSDs are running, you should also check placement group
196 states. You should expect that the cluster will **NOT** echo ``HEALTH OK`` in a
197 number of placement group peering-related circumstances:
198
199 #. You have just created a pool and placement groups haven't peered yet.
200 #. The placement groups are recovering.
201 #. You have just added an OSD to or removed an OSD from the cluster.
202 #. You have just modified your CRUSH map and your placement groups are migrating.
203 #. There is inconsistent data in different replicas of a placement group.
204 #. Ceph is scrubbing a placement group's replicas.
205 #. Ceph doesn't have enough storage capacity to complete backfilling operations.
206
207 If one of the foregoing circumstances causes Ceph to echo ``HEALTH WARN``, don't
208 panic. In many cases, the cluster will recover on its own. In some cases, you
209 may need to take action. An important aspect of monitoring placement groups is
210 to ensure that when the cluster is up and running that all placement groups are
211 ``active``, and preferably in the ``clean`` state. To see the status of all
212 placement groups, execute::
213
214 ceph pg stat
215
216 The result should tell you the total number of placement groups (x), how many
217 placement groups are in a particular state such as ``active+clean`` (y) and the
218 amount of data stored (z). ::
219
220 x pgs: y active+clean; z bytes data, aa MB used, bb GB / cc GB avail
221
222 .. note:: It is common for Ceph to report multiple states for placement groups.
223
224 In addition to the placement group states, Ceph will also echo back the amount of
225 storage capacity used (aa), the amount of storage capacity remaining (bb), and the total
226 storage capacity for the placement group. These numbers can be important in a
227 few cases:
228
229 - You are reaching your ``near full ratio`` or ``full ratio``.
230 - Your data is not getting distributed across the cluster due to an
231 error in your CRUSH configuration.
232
233
234 .. topic:: Placement Group IDs
235
236 Placement group IDs consist of the pool number (not pool name) followed
237 by a period (.) and the placement group ID--a hexadecimal number. You
238 can view pool numbers and their names from the output of ``ceph osd
239 lspools``. For example, the first pool created corresponds to
240 pool number ``1``. A fully qualified placement group ID has the
241 following form::
242
243 {pool-num}.{pg-id}
244
245 And it typically looks like this::
246
247 1.1f
248
249
250 To retrieve a list of placement groups, execute the following::
251
252 ceph pg dump
253
254 You can also format the output in JSON format and save it to a file::
255
256 ceph pg dump -o {filename} --format=json
257
258 To query a particular placement group, execute the following::
259
260 ceph pg {poolnum}.{pg-id} query
261
262 Ceph will output the query in JSON format.
263
264 The following subsections describe the common pg states in detail.
265
266 Creating
267 --------
268
269 When you create a pool, it will create the number of placement groups you
270 specified. Ceph will echo ``creating`` when it is creating one or more
271 placement groups. Once they are created, the OSDs that are part of a placement
272 group's Acting Set will peer. Once peering is complete, the placement group
273 status should be ``active+clean``, which means a Ceph client can begin writing
274 to the placement group.
275
276 .. ditaa::
277
278 /-----------\ /-----------\ /-----------\
279 | Creating |------>| Peering |------>| Active |
280 \-----------/ \-----------/ \-----------/
281
282 Peering
283 -------
284
285 When Ceph is Peering a placement group, Ceph is bringing the OSDs that
286 store the replicas of the placement group into **agreement about the state**
287 of the objects and metadata in the placement group. When Ceph completes peering,
288 this means that the OSDs that store the placement group agree about the current
289 state of the placement group. However, completion of the peering process does
290 **NOT** mean that each replica has the latest contents.
291
292 .. topic:: Authoritative History
293
294 Ceph will **NOT** acknowledge a write operation to a client, until
295 all OSDs of the acting set persist the write operation. This practice
296 ensures that at least one member of the acting set will have a record
297 of every acknowledged write operation since the last successful
298 peering operation.
299
300 With an accurate record of each acknowledged write operation, Ceph can
301 construct and disseminate a new authoritative history of the placement
302 group--a complete, and fully ordered set of operations that, if performed,
303 would bring an OSD’s copy of a placement group up to date.
304
305
306 Active
307 ------
308
309 Once Ceph completes the peering process, a placement group may become
310 ``active``. The ``active`` state means that the data in the placement group is
311 generally available in the primary placement group and the replicas for read
312 and write operations.
313
314
315 Clean
316 -----
317
318 When a placement group is in the ``clean`` state, the primary OSD and the
319 replica OSDs have successfully peered and there are no stray replicas for the
320 placement group. Ceph replicated all objects in the placement group the correct
321 number of times.
322
323
324 Degraded
325 --------
326
327 When a client writes an object to the primary OSD, the primary OSD is
328 responsible for writing the replicas to the replica OSDs. After the primary OSD
329 writes the object to storage, the placement group will remain in a ``degraded``
330 state until the primary OSD has received an acknowledgement from the replica
331 OSDs that Ceph created the replica objects successfully.
332
333 The reason a placement group can be ``active+degraded`` is that an OSD may be
334 ``active`` even though it doesn't hold all of the objects yet. If an OSD goes
335 ``down``, Ceph marks each placement group assigned to the OSD as ``degraded``.
336 The OSDs must peer again when the OSD comes back online. However, a client can
337 still write a new object to a ``degraded`` placement group if it is ``active``.
338
339 If an OSD is ``down`` and the ``degraded`` condition persists, Ceph may mark the
340 ``down`` OSD as ``out`` of the cluster and remap the data from the ``down`` OSD
341 to another OSD. The time between being marked ``down`` and being marked ``out``
342 is controlled by ``mon osd down out interval``, which is set to ``600`` seconds
343 by default.
344
345 A placement group can also be ``degraded``, because Ceph cannot find one or more
346 objects that Ceph thinks should be in the placement group. While you cannot
347 read or write to unfound objects, you can still access all of the other objects
348 in the ``degraded`` placement group.
349
350
351 Recovering
352 ----------
353
354 Ceph was designed for fault-tolerance at a scale where hardware and software
355 problems are ongoing. When an OSD goes ``down``, its contents may fall behind
356 the current state of other replicas in the placement groups. When the OSD is
357 back ``up``, the contents of the placement groups must be updated to reflect the
358 current state. During that time period, the OSD may reflect a ``recovering``
359 state.
360
361 Recovery is not always trivial, because a hardware failure might cause a
362 cascading failure of multiple OSDs. For example, a network switch for a rack or
363 cabinet may fail, which can cause the OSDs of a number of host machines to fall
364 behind the current state of the cluster. Each one of the OSDs must recover once
365 the fault is resolved.
366
367 Ceph provides a number of settings to balance the resource contention between
368 new service requests and the need to recover data objects and restore the
369 placement groups to the current state. The ``osd recovery delay start`` setting
370 allows an OSD to restart, re-peer and even process some replay requests before
371 starting the recovery process. The ``osd
372 recovery thread timeout`` sets a thread timeout, because multiple OSDs may fail,
373 restart and re-peer at staggered rates. The ``osd recovery max active`` setting
374 limits the number of recovery requests an OSD will entertain simultaneously to
375 prevent the OSD from failing to serve . The ``osd recovery max chunk`` setting
376 limits the size of the recovered data chunks to prevent network congestion.
377
378
379 Back Filling
380 ------------
381
382 When a new OSD joins the cluster, CRUSH will reassign placement groups from OSDs
383 in the cluster to the newly added OSD. Forcing the new OSD to accept the
384 reassigned placement groups immediately can put excessive load on the new OSD.
385 Back filling the OSD with the placement groups allows this process to begin in
386 the background. Once backfilling is complete, the new OSD will begin serving
387 requests when it is ready.
388
389 During the backfill operations, you may see one of several states:
390 ``backfill_wait`` indicates that a backfill operation is pending, but is not
391 underway yet; ``backfilling`` indicates that a backfill operation is underway;
392 and, ``backfill_toofull`` indicates that a backfill operation was requested,
393 but couldn't be completed due to insufficient storage capacity. When a
394 placement group cannot be backfilled, it may be considered ``incomplete``.
395
396 The ``backfill_toofull`` state may be transient. It is possible that as PGs
397 are moved around, space may become available. The ``backfill_toofull`` is
398 similar to ``backfill_wait`` in that as soon as conditions change
399 backfill can proceed.
400
401 Ceph provides a number of settings to manage the load spike associated with
402 reassigning placement groups to an OSD (especially a new OSD). By default,
403 ``osd_max_backfills`` sets the maximum number of concurrent backfills to and from
404 an OSD to 1. The ``backfill full ratio`` enables an OSD to refuse a
405 backfill request if the OSD is approaching its full ratio (90%, by default) and
406 change with ``ceph osd set-backfillfull-ratio`` command.
407 If an OSD refuses a backfill request, the ``osd backfill retry interval``
408 enables an OSD to retry the request (after 30 seconds, by default). OSDs can
409 also set ``osd backfill scan min`` and ``osd backfill scan max`` to manage scan
410 intervals (64 and 512, by default).
411
412
413 Remapped
414 --------
415
416 When the Acting Set that services a placement group changes, the data migrates
417 from the old acting set to the new acting set. It may take some time for a new
418 primary OSD to service requests. So it may ask the old primary to continue to
419 service requests until the placement group migration is complete. Once data
420 migration completes, the mapping uses the primary OSD of the new acting set.
421
422
423 Stale
424 -----
425
426 While Ceph uses heartbeats to ensure that hosts and daemons are running, the
427 ``ceph-osd`` daemons may also get into a ``stuck`` state where they are not
428 reporting statistics in a timely manner (e.g., a temporary network fault). By
429 default, OSD daemons report their placement group, up through, boot and failure
430 statistics every half second (i.e., ``0.5``), which is more frequent than the
431 heartbeat thresholds. If the **Primary OSD** of a placement group's acting set
432 fails to report to the monitor or if other OSDs have reported the primary OSD
433 ``down``, the monitors will mark the placement group ``stale``.
434
435 When you start your cluster, it is common to see the ``stale`` state until
436 the peering process completes. After your cluster has been running for awhile,
437 seeing placement groups in the ``stale`` state indicates that the primary OSD
438 for those placement groups is ``down`` or not reporting placement group statistics
439 to the monitor.
440
441
442 Identifying Troubled PGs
443 ========================
444
445 As previously noted, a placement group is not necessarily problematic just
446 because its state is not ``active+clean``. Generally, Ceph's ability to self
447 repair may not be working when placement groups get stuck. The stuck states
448 include:
449
450 - **Unclean**: Placement groups contain objects that are not replicated the
451 desired number of times. They should be recovering.
452 - **Inactive**: Placement groups cannot process reads or writes because they
453 are waiting for an OSD with the most up-to-date data to come back ``up``.
454 - **Stale**: Placement groups are in an unknown state, because the OSDs that
455 host them have not reported to the monitor cluster in a while (configured
456 by ``mon osd report timeout``).
457
458 To identify stuck placement groups, execute the following::
459
460 ceph pg dump_stuck [unclean|inactive|stale|undersized|degraded]
461
462 See `Placement Group Subsystem`_ for additional details. To troubleshoot
463 stuck placement groups, see `Troubleshooting PG Errors`_.
464
465
466 Finding an Object Location
467 ==========================
468
469 To store object data in the Ceph Object Store, a Ceph client must:
470
471 #. Set an object name
472 #. Specify a `pool`_
473
474 The Ceph client retrieves the latest cluster map and the CRUSH algorithm
475 calculates how to map the object to a `placement group`_, and then calculates
476 how to assign the placement group to an OSD dynamically. To find the object
477 location, all you need is the object name and the pool name. For example::
478
479 ceph osd map {poolname} {object-name} [namespace]
480
481 .. topic:: Exercise: Locate an Object
482
483 As an exercise, lets create an object. Specify an object name, a path to a
484 test file containing some object data and a pool name using the
485 ``rados put`` command on the command line. For example::
486
487 rados put {object-name} {file-path} --pool=data
488 rados put test-object-1 testfile.txt --pool=data
489
490 To verify that the Ceph Object Store stored the object, execute the following::
491
492 rados -p data ls
493
494 Now, identify the object location::
495
496 ceph osd map {pool-name} {object-name}
497 ceph osd map data test-object-1
498
499 Ceph should output the object's location. For example::
500
501 osdmap e537 pool 'data' (1) object 'test-object-1' -> pg 1.d1743484 (1.4) -> up ([0,1], p0) acting ([0,1], p0)
502
503 To remove the test object, simply delete it using the ``rados rm`` command.
504 For example::
505
506 rados rm test-object-1 --pool=data
507
508
509 As the cluster evolves, the object location may change dynamically. One benefit
510 of Ceph's dynamic rebalancing is that Ceph relieves you from having to perform
511 the migration manually. See the `Architecture`_ section for details.
512
513 .. _data placement: ../data-placement
514 .. _pool: ../pools
515 .. _placement group: ../placement-groups
516 .. _Architecture: ../../../architecture
517 .. _OSD Not Running: ../../troubleshooting/troubleshooting-osd#osd-not-running
518 .. _Troubleshooting PG Errors: ../../troubleshooting/troubleshooting-pg#troubleshooting-pg-errors
519 .. _Peering Failure: ../../troubleshooting/troubleshooting-pg#failures-osd-peering
520 .. _CRUSH map: ../crush-map
521 .. _Configuring Monitor/OSD Interaction: ../../configuration/mon-osd-interaction/
522 .. _Placement Group Subsystem: ../control#placement-group-subsystem