[gpfsug-discuss] hdisk suspend / stop (Buterbaugh, Kevin L)

Steve Xiao sxiao at us.ibm.com
Thu Feb 8 17:17:45 GMT 2018


You can change the cluster configuration to online unmount the file system 
when there is error accessing metadata.   This can be done run the 
following command:
   mmchconfig unmountOnDiskFail=meta -i 

After this configuration change, you should be able to stop all 5 NSDs 
with mmchdisk stop command.    While these NSDs are in down state, any 
user IO to files resides on these disks will fail but your file system 
should state mounted and usable.

Steve Y. Xiao

> Date: Thu, 8 Feb 2018 15:59:44 +0000
> From: "Buterbaugh, Kevin L" <Kevin.Buterbaugh at Vanderbilt.Edu>
> To: gpfsug main discussion list <gpfsug-discuss at spectrumscale.org>
> Subject: [gpfsug-discuss] mmchdisk suspend / stop
> Message-ID: <8DCA682D-9850-4C03-8930-EA6C68B41109 at vanderbilt.edu>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Hi All,
> 
> We are in a bit of a difficult situation right now with one of our 
> non-IBM hardware vendors (I know, I know, I KNOW - buy IBM hardware!
> <grin>) and are looking for some advice on how to deal with this 
> unfortunate situation.
> 
> We have a non-IBM FC storage array with dual-?redundant? 
> controllers.  One of those controllers is dead and the vendor is 
> sending us a replacement.  However, the replacement controller will 
> have mis-matched firmware with the surviving controller and - long 
> story short - the vendor says there is no way to resolve that 
> without taking the storage array down for firmware upgrades. 
> Needless to say there?s more to that story than what I?ve included 
> here, but I won?t bore everyone with unnecessary details.
> 
> The storage array has 5 NSDs on it, but fortunately enough they are 
> part of our ?capacity? pool ? i.e. the only way a file lands here is
> if an mmapplypolicy scan moved it there because the *access* time is
> greater than 90 days.  Filesystem data replication is set to one.
> 
> So ? what I was wondering if I could do is to use mmchdisk to either
> suspend or (preferably) stop those NSDs, do the firmware upgrade, 
> and resume the NSDs?  The problem I see is that suspend doesn?t stop
> I/O, it only prevents the allocation of new blocks ? so, in theory, 
> if a user suddenly decided to start using a file they hadn?t needed 
> for 3 months then I?ve got a problem.  Stopping all I/O to the disks
> is what I really want to do.  However, according to the mmchdisk man
> page stop cannot be used on a filesystem with replication set to one.
> 
> There?s over 250 TB of data on those 5 NSDs, so restriping off of 
> them or setting replication to two are not options.
> 
> It is very unlikely that anyone would try to access a file on those 
> NSDs during the hour or so I?d need to do the firmware upgrades, but
> how would GPFS itself react to those (suspended) disks going away 
> for a while?  I?m thinking I could be OK if there was just a way to 
> actually stop them rather than suspend them.  Any undocumented 
> options to mmchdisk that I?m not aware of???
> 
> Are there other options - besides buying IBM hardware - that I am 
> overlooking?  Thanks...
> 
> ?
> Kevin Buterbaugh - Senior System Administrator
> Vanderbilt University - Advanced Computing Center for Research and 
Education
> Kevin.Buterbaugh at vanderbilt.edu<mailto:Kevin.Buterbaugh at vanderbilt.edu
> > - (615)875-9633
> 
> 
> 



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