]
Dan Berindei resolved ISPN-2986.
--------------------------------
Resolution: Partially Completed
Increasing the number of OOB threads fixed the issue. ISPN-2849 will improve the situation
with a lower number of OOB threads.
Intermittent failure to start new nodes during heavy write load
---------------------------------------------------------------
Key: ISPN-2986
URL:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-2986
Project: Infinispan
Issue Type: Bug
Components: Distributed Cache, Server
Affects Versions: 5.2.5.Final
Environment: 4 servers running linux 2.6.32-220.13.1.el6.x86_64 with 2x QuadCore
2.4ghz CPU's
Gigabit ethernet, same switch.
java version "1.7.0"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0-b147)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 21.0-b17, mixed mode)
Reporter: Marc Bridner
Assignee: Tristan Tarrant
Attachments: logs.zip, test-infinispan.xml, test-jgroups.xml,
test.infinispan.zip
When under heavy write load from a hotrod client with 64+ threads and a new node is
started, the new node will sometimes fail to start, eventually giving off state transfer
timeouts and finally terminating. During the time it takes it to time out (~10 minutes)
the hotrod client is totally blocked.
Setup is as follows:
3 servers, 1 client
* dl380x2385, 10.64.106.21, client
* dl380x2384, 10.64.106.20, first node
* dl380x2383, 10.64.106.19, second node
* dl380x2382, 10.64.106.18, third node
2 caches, initial state transfer off, transactions on, config is attached.
Small app that triggers the problem is also attached.
Steps to reproduce:
1. Start first node
2. Start client, wait for counter to reach 50000 (in client)
3. Start second node. 10% chance it'll fail.
4. Wait for counter to reach 100000 in client.
5. Start third node, 50% chance it'll fail.
If it doesn't fail, terminate everything and start over.
I realize this may be hard to reproduce, so if any more logs or tests are needed, let me
know.
I've been unable to reproduce it on a single physical machine, and it only occurs
when using more than 64 client threads. Changing the ratio of writes between the caches
also seems to make it not occur. I was unable to reproduce it with TRACE log level on (too
slow), but if you can specify some packages that you want traces of, that might work.
Turning transactions off makes it worse, 90% chance to fail on second node. Funny enough,
disabling the concurrent GC lowers the failure rate to 10% on third node. Guessing race
condition somewhere, may be similar to ISPN-2982.
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