Notes. Mainly for me but might be useful/of interest to users.
Message:
Our current file server is sharptail.wesleyan.edu which serves out home directories (/home, 10T). A new file server hpcstore.wesleyan.edu will be deployed taking over this function (/zfshomes, 190T). This notice is to inform you your home directory has been cut over.
There are no changes for you. When you log into cottontail or cottontail2 you end up in your new home directory. $HOME and ~username work as usual. The only difference is that your old home was at /home/username and now it is at /zfshomes/username.
If you wish to load/unload large content from your new home directory please log into hpcstore.wesleyan.edu directly (via ssh/sftp) or preferably use rsync with a bandwidth throttle no larger than “–bwlimit=5000”.
Details at
https://dokuwiki.wesleyan.edu/doku.php?id=cluster:194
# from outside via VPN $ ssh hpc21@hpcstore.wesleyan.edu hpc21@hpcstore.wesleyan.edu's password: FreeBSD 11.2-STABLE (TrueNAS.amd64) (banner snip ...) Welcome to TrueNAS # note we ended up on node "B" [hpc21@hpcstore2 ~]$ pwd /mnt/tank/zfshomes/hpc21 [hpc21@hpcstore2 ~]$ echo $HOME /mnt/tank/zfshomes/hpc21 # quota check [hpc21@hpcstore2 ~]$ zfs userspace tank/zfshomes | egrep -i "quota|$USER" TYPE NAME USED QUOTA POSIX User hpc21 282K 500G # from inside HPCC with ssh keys properly set up [hpc21@cottontail ~]$ ssh hpcstore Last login: Mon Mar 23 10:58:27 2020 from 129.133.52.222 [hpc21@cottontail ~]$ echo $HOME /zfshomes/hpc21 [hpc21@hpcstore2 ~]$ df -h . Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on tank/zfshomes 177T 414G 177T 0% /mnt/tank/zfshomes
[hmeij@ThisPC]$ rsync -vac --dry-run --whole-file --bwlimit=4096 \ c:\Users\hmeij\ hpcstore:/mnt/tank/zfshomes/hmeij/ sending incremental file list ...
Not any more. Serious conflict between NFS and SMB ACLs if both protocols enabled on same dataset. So nobody has a samba share. If you want to drop&drag you need to use something like CyberDuck and make an sftp connection.
— Henk 2020/05/28 11:10
# windows command line C:\Users\hmeij07>net use W: \\hpcstore.wesleyan.edu\hmeij /user:hmeij Enter the password for 'hmeij' to connect to 'hpcstore.wesleyan.edu': The command completed successfully. # or ThisPC > Map Network Drive \\hpcstore.wesleyan.edu\username # user is hpcc username, password is hpcc password
netcli
, change/reset root passsword herenetcli
)
High Availability. Two controllers hpcstore1
(also known as A) and hpcstore2
(also known as B).
Virtual IP hpcstore.wesleyan.edu
floats back and forth seamlessly (tested, some protocols will loose connectivity). In a split brain situation (no response, both controllers think they are it), disconnect one controller from power then reboot. Then reconnect and wait a few minutes for HA icon to turn green when controller comes online.
Critical for Failover Network Interfaces marked for IGB0 and IGB1 (/zfshomes via NFS) and lagg0 (vlan52)
You can always Disable Failover, to fix power feed of switches 192.168.0.0/16 or 10.10.0.0/16
Check Box to Disable Failover Go to WebUI > System > Failover > Click the Box > Then Click Save (leave default controller setting as is)
This will allow you to make your network change without failing over. Sync to Peer, probably not necessary since you are on the Active controller. Once you are finished, then yes sync with Failover Enabled (no standby reboot).
Allowed for large content transfers using scp
or sftp
or just checking things out.
TODO: rsync?
Home directories are located in /mnt/tank/zfshomes
. When users get cut over their location will be updated in the /etc/passwd
file and $HOME becomes /zfshomes/username
. So we can keep track of that. Followed by an rsync process that will from TrueNAS/ZFS appliance rsync to sharptail:/home
.
TODO: write script. \
TODO: add disksold sharptail:/home, enlarge and merge LVMs.
TODO: backup target
# create user, no new but set primary + auxillary groups, full-name # set shell, set permissions, some random passwd date +%N with symbols # then move all dot files into ~/._nas scp ~/.ssh over # copy content over from sharptail, @hpcstore... rsync -ac --bwlimit=4096 --whole-file --stats sharptail:/home/hmeij/ /mnt/tank/zfshomes/hmeij/ # SSH keys in place so should be passwordless, test ssh username@hpcstore.wesleyan.edu # go to $HOME cd /mnt/tank/zfshomes/username # this will be mounted HPC wide at /zfshomes/username
# for users zfs allow everyone userquota,userused tank/zfshomes # as user zfs userspace tank/zfshomes zfs groupspace tank/zfshomes # uttlerly bizarre in v12 these commands change root@hpcstore2[~]# su - hmeij07 hpcstore2% hpcstore2% zfs get userused@hmeij07 tank/zfshomes NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE tank/zfshomes userused@hmeij07 718K local hpcstore2% zfs get userquota@hmeij07 tank/zfshomes NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE tank/zfshomes userquota@hmeij07 500G local hpcstore2% zfs get userspace@hmeij07 tank/zfshomes bad property list: invalid property 'userspace@hmeij07' # hpc100 TYPE NAME USED QUOTA POSIX User hpc100 14.9G 100G POSIX User root 1K none # set quota zfs set userquota@hpc100=100g tank/zfshomes zfs set groupquota@hpc100=100g tank/zfshomes # get userused zfs get userused@hpc100 tank/zfshomes # list snapshots zfs list -t snapshot # output NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT freenas-boot/ROOT/default@2019-12-17-22:04:34 2.10M - 827M - tank/zfshomes@auto-20200309.1348-1y 210K - 558K - tank/zfshomes@auto-20200310.1348-1y 219K - 14.8G - tank/zfshomes@auto-20200311.1348-1y 165K - 14.9G - # health zpool status -v tank pool: tank state: ONLINE scan: scrub repaired 0 in 0 days 00:00:02 with 0 errors on Sun Feb 2 03:00:04 2020 config: NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM tank ONLINE 0 0 0 raidz2-0 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/104a748f-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/10d0c16e-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/115414b8-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/11dd105d-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/12636cff-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/12e6d913-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/13676269-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/13ee7fb2-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/14706a76-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1504c334-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1592a623-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 raidz2-1 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/16250571-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/16b4a392-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/173e4974-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/17cb4efb-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1861c750-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/18ef1edd-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/197d9fc9-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1a09eebb-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1a99e25d-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1b2dd0b5-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1bbaa252-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 raidz2-2 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1c60422c-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1cedf16e-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1d807f27-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1e0d0a20-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1e9dec87-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1f603e96-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/1ff8b82e-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/2087c210-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/21128be3-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/21ab0c6c-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 gptid/2241e3e2-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 logs gptid/238a4161-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 cache gptid/23426c62-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 ONLINE 0 0 0 spares gptid/22f36c47-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 AVAIL errors: No known data errors
SMB/CIFS (Samba) shares are also created once the homedir is up. NOT!
# v that plus is the problem drwxr-xr-x+ 147 root wheel 147 Apr 27 08:17 /mnt/tank/zfshomes # either use ACL editor to strip off in v13.1-U2 or setfacl -bn /mnt/tank/zfshomes/ followed by for example find /mnt/tank/zfshomes/hmeij/ -type d -exec setfacl -bn {} \; # also unsupported via shell
/usr/local/etc/smb4.conf
Note At user creation a random password is set. Please ask to have it reset to access SMB shares. (there should be some self-serve password reset functionality with email confirmation but I cannot find it for now. Any passwords changed outside of database will not be persistent across boots.
# windows, map network drive \\hpcstore.wesleyan.edu\username # credentials, one or all of these may work WORKGROUP\username localhost\username username
Change $HOME location in /etc/passwd
and propagate.
Note remove access to old $HOME … chown root:root + chmod o-rwx
END OF USER ACCOUNT SETUP
root@hpcstore1[~]# cat /etc/exports /mnt/tank/zfshomes -maproot="root":"wheel" -network 192.168.0.0/16 /mnt/tank/zfshomes -maproot="root":"wheel" -network 10.10.0.0/16 /mnt/tank/zfshomes-auto-20200310.1348-1y-clone -ro \ -maproot="root":"wheel" -network 192.168.0.0/16 /mnt/tank/zfshomes-auto-20200310.1348-1y-clone -ro \ -maproot="root":"wheel" -network 10.10.0.0/16
Rollback is a potentially dangerous operation
Instead restore via snapshots. See Guide.
Snapshots made easier in new releases … traverse to the hidden directory /zfshomes/.zfs/snapshot
and find the snapshot day desired. Content is read only. Once you cd
into a snapshpot an autofs mount is performed.
129.133.52.245:/mnt/tank/zfshomes/.zfs/snapshot/auto-20221126.0200-1y 251T 77T 175T 31% /zfshomes/.zfs/snapshot/auto-20221126.0200-1y
root:wheel
(also for mnt/tankl/zfshomes)cottontail2:/mnt/hpc_store_snapshot“
# mountpoints (maproot=root:wheel) drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Mar 10 14:08 /mnt/clone0310 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Mar 6 14:01 /zfshomes # /etc/fstab examples (either private network) #192.168.102.245:/mnt/tank/zfshomes \ /zfshomes nfs rw,tcp,soft,intr,bg,vers=3 #10.10.102.245:/mnt/tank/zfshomes \ /zfshomes nfs rw,tcp,soft,intr,bg,vers=3 #192.168.102.245:/mnt/tank/zfshomes-auto-20200310.1348-1y-clone \ /mnt/clone0310 nfs ro,tcp,soft,intr,bg,vers=3 10.10.102.245:/mnt/tank/zfshomes-auto-20200310.1348-1y-clone \ /mnt/clone0310 nfs ro,tcp,soft,intr,bg,vers=3
See Update 12 for manual update to v12 with Anthony on 03.09.2021
Change the Train to 11.3, then you will apply the update first in the WebUI to the passive controller.
After its reboots, you will failover to it by rebooting the Active controller (the current WebUI).
This will failover to the updated 11.3-U2.1 controller (brief interruption).
From there, you would go to System > Update and do the same for the NEW passive controller.
After that initiate failover back to primary via dashboard (brief interruption).
Enable HA, click icon
Apply Pending Updates Upgrades both controllers. Files are downloaded to the Active Controller and then transferred to the Standby Controller. The upgrade process starts concurrently on both TrueNAS Controllers.
Server responds while HA disabled. You are instructed to Initiate Fail Over, do so, just take 5 seconds. The Continue with pending upgrade … wait 5 mins or so, watch console activity. THEN Log out and log back in once the passive standby is on new update.
Update takes 15 mins in total.
11.3 U5
Two types, hard to find in stock.
8T SAS da0: <HGST HUS728T8TAL4201 B460> Fixed Direct Access SPC-4 SCSI device da0: Serial Number VAKM5GTL da0: 1200.000MB/s transfers da0: Command Queueing enabled da0: 7630885MB (1953506646 4096 byte sectors) exxactcorp https://www.exxactcorp.com/search?q=HUS728T8TAL4201 800G SSD da2: <WDC WUSTR6480ASS201 B925> Fixed Direct Access SPC-5 SCSI device da2: Serial Number V6V1XGDA da2: Command Queueing enabled da2: 763097MB (1562824368 512 byte sectors) exxactcorp https://www.exxactcorp.com/search?q=WUSTR6480ASS201
From support:
That information is logged via syslog for the opposite controller. For example, to find the information I did here, I looked in the syslog output on the controller that was passive at the time these alerts occurred.
You can look that information up yourself by opening an SSH session to the passive controller, navigating to the /root/syslog directory and examining the files. The “controller_{a,b}” file shows the output for today. Extract the controller_a.0.bz2 file and read the output of the resulting controller_a.0 file to see the output for yesterday. controller_a.1 would contain the output for the day before yesterday, and so on.
When ending up with an error fail over state try console shutdown first. If that does not work cut power to controllers. Power down disk array, wait 10 mins, power up, wait 10 mins. Slide one controller out an inch or so. Power up other controller which will become the active controller. Wait 10 mins, log in, look around. Slide in other controller and restore redundant power for both controllers. Wait till HA is enabled. This is how you get out of a split-brain situation.
Manual debug file creation, then ftp to ftp.ixsystems.com
freenas-debug -A tar czvf fndebug-wesleyan-20201123.tar.gz /var/tmp/fndebug # next look at bottom of fndebug/SMART/dump.txt /dev/da10 HGST:7200:HUS728T8TAL4201:VAKM187L C:30 dR:2 dW:2503 dL:55 uR:0 uW:0 SMART Status:OK **!!!** /dev/da9 HGST:7200:HUS728T8TAL4201:VAKL26ML C:30 dR:3 dW:0 dL:0 uR:0 uW:39 SMART Status:OK **!!!** # these drives have not failed yet but have write errors, offline/replace, see below # next look at output of zpool status -x in fndebug/ZFS/dump.txt # and the error code # https://illumos.org/msg/ZFS-8000-9P NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM tank DEGRADED 0 0 0 ... raidz2-1 DEGRADED 0 0 0 gptid/16250571-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 DEGRADED 0 0 1.09K too many errors # look for checksums that have failed like this disk in vdev raidz2-1 # clean up the spare that resilvered (INUSE status) # then run a clear on the pool. Then we'll try to get another debug. zpool detach tank gptid/173e4974-211a-11ea-bbd5-b496915e40c8 zpool clear tank # that brought all drives back online and the vdevs show # then via gui added the available drive back as spare
Replace a failed drive
1) Go into the Storage > Pools page. Click the Gear icon next to the pool and press the "Status" option. 2) Find da4 and press the three-dot options button next to it, then press "Offline". 3) Go to the System > View Enclosure page, select da4 and press "Identify" to light up the drive on the rack. 4) Physically swap the drive on the rack with its replacement. 5) Go back to the Storage > Pool > Status page, bring up the options for the removed drive, 5a) Select member disk from dropdown, and press "Replace". Success popup, click Close. The replacement drive may or may not have been given the name "da4". 6) Wait for the drive to finish resilvering before proceeding to replace da3. 6a) Click spinning icon to view progress. Pool status "healthy" while resilvering. Return the drives in original box, return label provided.
Pool Unhealthy but not Degraded status
No failed disks, no deploy of spare, but pool unhealthy. The dump.txt
files for SMART and ZFS show nothing remarkable. But in the console log we observe that disk da11 has problems. RMA issued. 3rd replacement disk in a year.
Mar 21 04:03:57 hpcstore2 (da11:mpr0:0:21:0): READ(10). CDB: 28 00 1b b0 80 13 00 00 02 00 Mar 21 04:03:57 hpcstore2 (da11:mpr0:0:21:0): CAM status: SCSI Status Error Mar 21 04:03:57 hpcstore2 (da11:mpr0:0:21:0): SCSI status: Check Condition Mar 21 04:03:57 hpcstore2 (da11:mpr0:0:21:0): SCSI sense: ABORTED COMMAND asc:44,0 (Internal target failure) Mar 21 04:03:57 hpcstore2 (da11:mpr0:0:21:0): Descriptor 0x80: f7 72 Mar 21 04:03:57 hpcstore2 (da11:mpr0:0:21:0): Error 5, Unretryable error 1) Storage > Pools. Click gear icon next to the pool and press the "Status" option. 2) Find da11 and press the three-dot options button next to it, then press "Offline". 3) System > View Enclosure, find&select da11, press "Identify". 4) Physically swap the drive on the rack with its replacement. 5) Storage > Pool > Status page, bring up three-dot options for the removed drive, 5a) Select member disk from drop down, and press "Replace". Success popup, click Close. 6) Wait till resilver finishes.
12.7
As for the issue of the “Please Wait” box spins forever (when creating a new user via GUI) I would try refreshing the WebUI service and seeing if that fixes the issue. You can do this by running the following commands via a SSH session to the VIP.
service middlewared stop
service middlewared start
“try” not very convincing … I open another tab, check user, close previous tab … also the .[a-z]* csh hidden files are not created - no bother, we use bash
System > Update > Select (new train 12.0-STABLE)
Open a console on both controllers without double ssh sessions, directly to hpcstore1/2
zpool status
ifconfig ntb0
, internal heartbeat IPS 169.254.10.1 and 169.254.10.2
Then download updates on passive, check version hactl
run check first, then update via cli
freenas-update -v -T TrueNAS-12.0-STABLE check
freenas-update -v -T TrueNAS-12.0-STABLE update
…10%…20%…30%…40%…50%…60%…70%…80%…90%…100%
reboot passive
from active ping passive heartbeat IP, when up
check version passive
check boot env beadm list
(shows N now, R reboot for 12.0)
on passive tail -f /var/log/messages
now force fail over via GUI (interruptive for 6o seconds)
Anthony did a reboot on active instead, watch log for personality swap
then update the new passive
freenas-update -v -T TrueNAS-12.0-STABLE check
freenas-update -v -T TrueNAS-12.0-STABLE update
then check version, reboot new passive, check version, become new standby
Result: personality switch active vs standby, took 35 mins
In two months: ZFS feature updates pathch, not interruptive, do around 04/09/2021
Upgrade done
— Henk 2021/06/07 07:40
Storage > Pool > “wheel” > Upgrade Pool
12.0-U4.1
12.0-U5.1
Not created/set, see below …
While the underlying issues have been fixed, this setting continues to be disabled by default for additional performance investigation. To manually reactivate persistent L2ARC, log in to the TrueNAS Web Interface, go to System > Tunables, and add a new tunable with these values:
Type = sysctl Variable = vfs.zfs.l2arc.rebuild_enabled Value = 1
From support: In an HA environment, this tunable actually delays failover while it ensures L2ARC. The tunable for the “persistent L2ARC”. Preloads your ARC with what you had before, but slows down imports and failovers. Not super useful if you don't reboot or failover often.
12.0-U6
12.0-U6.1
12.0-U7
12.0-U8
12.0-U8.1
System > Update > Select (new train 13.0-STABLE)
# in shell freenas-update -v -T TrueNAS-13.0-STABLE check freenas-update -v -T TrueNAS-13.0-STABLE update …10%…20%…30%…40%…50%…60%…70%…80%…90%…100% beadm list # (Active N = 12.0-U8.1 and R = 13.0-U3.1)
once both have finished, reboot passive, web gui log back in
once passive back up, reboot active
web gui log back into new active, wait for HA to be enabled
debug plus screenshots for snapshot visibility which is visible (working in 13.0-U3.1) but database setting is still invisble
took less than 35 mins
bstop 0 bresume 0 # manual, one at a time scontrol hold joblist # one at a time # for i in `squeue | grep ' R ' | awk '{print $1}'`; do echo $i; done # then grep ' S ' scontrol suspend joblist scontrol resume joblist scontrol release joblist
13.0-U4 04/03/2023
13.0-U5.1 07/07/2023
13.0-U5.3 08/25/2023
Next support ticket: Ask if you ever need to reboot the disk shelves? Full power off?
Hi, I'm archiving content from my TrueNAS appliance to another platform, then deleting the files migrated. I'm observing directories like this; 7.5 million files in 990 GB or 15 million files in 7 TB. Should I be concerned that the disk shelves have never be cold rebooted? Like XFS replaying the log journal for a clean mount? My HA nodes reboot on upgrade but I realize the disk arrays keep running, always. Please advise, thanks.
Tier 1 Support: The 2 ES24 shelves do not require to be rebooted as they just house the drives themselves and provide power to them. There shouldn't be any concern with these being on at all time.
Rsync stats (after decompressing)
sod1/ Number of files: 18,691,764 Total transferred file size: 13072322138140 bytes arnt_rosetta/ Number of files: 8,825,674 Total transferred file size: 1,798,675,349,128 bytes
13.0-U6.1 12/12/2023
13.0-U6.2 08/20/2024