From: Yunkai Zhang:

Today, I have observed one of the reason that corosync running into
FAILED TO RECEIVE state.

There was five nodes(A,B,C,D,E) in my testing, and I limited the UDP
transmission rate of C nodes by iptables command:
iptables -A INPUT -i eth0 -p udp -m limit --limit 10000/s
--limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
iptables -A INPUT -i eth0 -p udp -j DROP

After one hour later, C node had been missing some MCAST messages,
it's state described as following:
==state of C node==
my_aru:0x805
my_high_seq_received:0xC2C
my_aru_count:7

=>receved MCAST message with seq:806 from B nodes
=>enter *message_handler_mcast*
  =>add this message to regular_sort_queue
  ...
  =>enter *update_aru* function
    => range = (my_high_seq_received - my_aru)
             = (0xC2C - 0x805)
             = 1063
    => if range>1024, do nothing and and return directly.
==END==

According this logic, after (my_high_req_received-my_aru)>1024, my_aru
will not be updated though corosync can receive MCAST messages
retransmitted by other nodes.

But at that timte, my_aru_count was only 7. So the corosync at C node
would keep in this status until my_aru_count increased to
fail_to_recv_const(the default value is 2500). This was a long time
for corosync, but we wasted it.

To solve this issue, maybe we can enlarge the range condition in
update_aru function? Or we just ingnore the checking of range value,
it seems no harmfull, because we have been using fail_to_recv_const to
control the things.

Signed-off-by: Steven Dake <sdake@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Jan Friesse <jfriesse@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Steven Dake 2011-11-29 07:41:53 -07:00
parent 19652c3d7c
commit e48ddf99a6

View File

@ -2417,9 +2417,6 @@ static void update_aru (
}
range = instance->my_high_seq_received - instance->my_aru;
if (range > 1024) {
return;
}
my_aru_saved = instance->my_aru;
for (i = 1; i <= range; i++) {