Apache Kudu Troubleshooting

This document applies to Apache Kudu version 1.15.0. Please consult the documentation of the appropriate release that’s applicable to the version of the Kudu cluster.

Startup Errors

Errors During Hole Punching Test

Kudu requires hole punching capabilities in order to be efficient. Hole punching support depends upon your operation system kernel version and local filesystem implementation.

  • RHEL or CentOS 6.4 or later, patched to kernel version of 2.6.32-358 or later. Unpatched RHEL or CentOS 6.4 does not include a kernel with support for hole punching.

  • Ubuntu 14.04 includes version 3.13 of the Linux kernel, which supports hole punching.

  • Newer versions of the ext4 and xfs filesystems support hole punching. Older versions that do not support hole punching will cause Kudu to emit an error message such as the following and to fail to start:

    Error during hole punch test. The log block manager requires a
    filesystem with hole punching support such as ext4 or xfs. On el6,
    kernel version 2.6.32-358 or newer is required. To run without hole
    punching (at the cost of some efficiency and scalability), reconfigure
    Kudu to use the file block manager. Refer to the Kudu documentation for
    more details. WARNING: the file block manager is not suitable for
    production use and should be used only for small-scale evaluation and
    development on systems where hole-punching is not available. It's
    impossible to switch between block managers after data is written to the
    server. Raw error message follows
ext4 mountpoints may actually be backed by ext2 or ext3 formatted devices, which do not support hole punching. The hole punching test will fail when run on such filesystems. There are several different ways to determine whether an ext4 mountpoint is backed by an ext2, ext3, or ext4 formatted device; see this Stack Exchange post for details.

Without hole punching support, the log block manager is unsafe to use. It won’t ever delete blocks, and will consume ever more space on disk.

If you can’t use hole punching in your environment, you can still try Kudu. Enable the file block manager instead of the log block manager by adding the --block_manager=file flag to the commands you use to start the master and tablet servers. The file block manager does not scale as well as the log block manager.

The file block manager is known to scale and perform poorly, and should only be used for small-scale evaluation and development, and only on systems where hole punching is unavailable.

The file block manager uses one file per block. As multiple blocks are written for each rowset, the number of blocks can be very high, especially for actively written tablets. This can cause performance issues compared to the log block manager even with a small amount of data and it’s impossible to switch between block managers without wiping and reinitializing the tablet servers.

Already present: FS layout already exists

When Kudu starts, it checks each configured data directory, expecting either for all to be initialized or for all to be empty. If a server fails to start with a log message like

Check failed: _s.ok() Bad status: Already present: FS layout already exists; not overwriting existing layout: FSManager roots already exist: /data0/kudu/data

then this precondition has failed. This could be because Kudu was configured with non-empty data directories on first startup, or because a previously-running, healthy Kudu process was restarted and at least one data directory was deleted or is somehow corrupted, perhaps because of a disk error. If in the latter situation, consult the Changing Directory Configurations documentation.

NTP Clock Synchronization

The local clock of the machine where Kudu master or tablet server is running must be synchronized using the Network Time Protocol (NTP) if using the system time source. The time source is controlled by the --time_source flag and by default is set to system.

Kudu requires the maximum clock error (not to be mistaken with the estimated error) of the NTP-synchronized clock be below a configurable threshold. The default threshold value is 10 seconds and it can be customized using the --max_clock_sync_error_usec flag.

When running with the system time source, Kudu will not start and will emit a message such as below if the local clock is reported unsynchronized:

F0924 20:24:36.336809 14550 hybrid_clock.cc:191 Couldn't get the current time: Clock unsynchronized. Status: Service unavailable: Error reading clock. Clock considered unsynchronized.

If the machine’s clock is synchronized, but the maximum clock error is too high, the user will see a message such as:

Sep 17, 8:13:09.873 PM FATAL hybrid_clock.cc:196 Couldn't get the current time: Clock synchronized, but error: 11130000, is past the maximum allowable error: 10000000

or

Sep 17, 8:32:31.135 PM FATAL tablet_server_main.cc:38 Check failed: _s.ok() Bad status: Service unavailable: Cannot initialize clock: Cannot initialize HybridClock. Clock synchronized but error was too high (11711000 us).

In this and following NTP-related paragraphs, when talking about the 'synchronization' with true time using NTP, we are referring to a couple of things: - the synchronization status of the NTP server which drives the local clock of the machine - the synchronization status of the local machine’s clock itself as reported by the kernel’s NTP discipline

The former can be retrieved using the ntpstat, ntpq, and ntpdc utilities if using ntpd (they are included in the ntp package) or the chronyc utility if using chronyd (that’s a part of the chrony package). The latter can be retrieved using either the ntptime utility (the ntptime utility is also a part of the ntp package) or the chronyc utility if using chronyd. For more information, see the manual pages of the mentioned utilities and the paragraphs below.

For a long time, ntpd has been the recommended NTP server to use on Kudu nodes to synchronize local machines' clocks. Newer releases of Linux OS offer chronyd as an alternative to ntpd for network time synchronization. Both have been tested and proven to provide necessary functionality for clock synchronisation in a Kudu cluster.

Installing And Running ntpd

ntpd is the NTP server from the ubiquitous ntp suite.

To install ntpd and other NTP-related utilities, use the appropriate command for your operating system:

OS Command

Debian/Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install ntp

RHEL/CentOS

sudo yum install ntp

If ntpd is installed but not running, start it using one of these commands (don’t forget to run ntpdate first):

OS Command

Debian/Ubuntu

sudo service ntp restart

RHEL/CentOS

sudo service ntpd restart

Make sure ntpdate is in the list of services running when the machine starts: ntpdate should be run prior starting ntpd to avoid long synchronization delay of the machine’s local clock with the true time. The smaller the offset between local machine’s clock and the true time, the faster the NTP server can synchronize the clock.

When running ntpdate, make sure the tool reports success: check its exit status and output. In case of issues connecting to the NTP servers, make sure NTP traffic is not being blocked by a firewall (NTP generates UDP traffic on port 123 by default) or other network connectivity issue.

Below are a few examples of configuration files for ntpd. By default, ntpd uses /etc/ntp.conf configuration file.

# Use my organization's internal NTP server (server in a local network).
server ntp1.myorg.internal iburst maxpoll 7
# Add servers from the NTP public pool for redundancy and robustness.
server 0.pool.ntp.org iburst maxpoll 8
server 1.pool.ntp.org iburst maxpoll 8
server 2.pool.ntp.org iburst maxpoll 8
server 3.pool.ntp.org iburst maxpoll 8
# AWS case: use dedicated NTP server available via link-local IP address.
server 169.254.169.123 iburst
# GCE case: use dedicated NTP server available from within cloud instance.
server metadata.google.internal iburst

Sometimes it takes too long to synchronize the machine’s local clock with the true time even if the ntpstat utility reports that the NTP daemon is synchronized with one of the reference NTP servers. This manifests as the following: the utilities which report on the synchronization status of the NTP daemon claim that all is well, but ntptime claims that the status of the local clock is unsynchronized and Kudu tablet servers and masters refuse to start, outputting an error like the one mentioned above. This situation often happens if the ntpd is run with the -x option. According to the manual page of ntpd, the -x flag configures the NTP server to only slew the clock. Without -x, the NTP server would do a step adjustment instead:

  -x     Normally, the time is slewed if the offset is less than the
         step threshold, which is 128 ms by default, and stepped if
         above the threshold. This option sets the threshold to 600 s,
         which is well within the accuracy window to set the clock manually.
         Note: Since the slew rate of typical Unix kernels is limited to
         0.5 ms/s, each second of	adjustment requires an amortization
         interval of 2000 s. Thus, an adjustment as much as 600 s
         will take almost 14 days to complete.

In such cases, removing the -x option will help synchronize the local clock faster.

More information on best practices and examples of practical resolution of various NTP synchronization issues can be found found at clock-drift

Monitoring Clock Synchronization Status With The ntp Suite

When the ntp package is installed, you can monitor the synchronization status of the machine’s clock by running ntptime. For example, a system with a local clock that is synchronized may report:

ntp_gettime() returns code 0 (OK)
  time de24c0cf.8d5da274  Tue, Feb  6 2018 16:03:27.552, (.552210980),
  maximum error 224455 us, estimated error 383 us, TAI offset 0
ntp_adjtime() returns code 0 (OK)
  modes 0x0 (),
  offset 1279.543 us, frequency 2.500 ppm, interval 1 s,
  maximum error 224455 us, estimated error 383 us,
  status 0x2001 (PLL,NANO),
  time constant 10, precision 0.001 us, tolerance 500 ppm,

Note the following most important pieces of output:

  • maximum error 22455 us: this value is well under the 10-second maximum error required by Kudu.

  • status 0x2001 (PLL,NANO): this indicates the local clock is synchronized with the true time up to the maximum error above

In contrast, a system with unsynchronized local clock would report something like the following:

ntp_gettime() returns code 5 (ERROR)
  time de24c240.0c006000  Tue, Feb  6 2018 16:09:36.046, (.046881),
  maximum error 16000000 us, estimated error 16000000 us, TAI offset 0
ntp_adjtime() returns code 5 (ERROR)
  modes 0x0 (),
  offset 0.000 us, frequency 2.500 ppm, interval 1 s,
  maximum error 16000000 us, estimated error 16000000 us,
  status 0x40 (UNSYNC),
  time constant 10, precision 1.000 us, tolerance 500 ppm,

The UNSYNC status means the local clock is not synchronized with the true time. Because of that, the maximum reported error doesn’t convey any meaningful estimation of the actual error.

The ntpstat utility reports a summary on the synchronization status of the NTP daemon itself. For example, a system which have ntpd running and synchronized with one of its reference servers may report:

$ ntpstat
synchronised to NTP server (172.18.7.3) at stratum 4
   time correct to within 160 ms
   polling server every 1024 s

Keep in mind that the synchronization status of the NTP daemon itself doesn’t reflect the synchronization status of the local clock. The way NTP daemon drives the local clock is subject to many constraints, and it may take the NTP daemon some time to synchronize the local clock after it itself has latched to one of the reference servers.

If more detailed information is needed on the synchronization status of the NTP server (but not the synchronization status of the local clock), the ntpq or ntpdc tools can be used to get detailed information about what NTP server is currently acting as the source of the true time and which are considered as candidates (either viable or not):

$ ntpq -nc lpeers
     remote           refid      st t when poll reach   delay   offset  jitter
==============================================================================
-108.59.2.24     130.133.1.10     2 u   13   64    1   71.743    0.373   0.016
+192.96.202.120  129.6.15.28      2 u   12   64    1   72.583   -0.426   0.028
-69.10.161.7     204.26.59.157    3 u   11   64    1   15.741    2.641   0.021
-173.255.206.154 45.56.123.24     3 u   10   64    1   43.502    0.199   0.029
-69.195.159.158  128.138.140.44   2 u    9   64    1   53.885   -0.016   0.013
*216.218.254.202 .CDMA.           1 u    6   64    1    1.475   -0.400   0.012
+129.250.35.250  249.224.99.213   2 u    7   64    1    1.342   -0.640   0.018

$ ntpq -nc opeers
     remote           local      st t when poll reach   delay   offset    disp
==============================================================================
-108.59.2.24     10.17.100.238    2 u   17   64    1   71.743    0.373 187.573
+192.96.202.120  10.17.100.238    2 u   16   64    1   72.583   -0.426 187.594
-69.10.161.7     10.17.100.238    3 u   15   64    1   15.741    2.641 187.569
-173.255.206.154 10.17.100.238    3 u   14   64    1   43.502    0.199 187.580
-69.195.159.158  10.17.100.238    2 u   13   64    1   53.885   -0.016 187.561
*216.218.254.202 10.17.100.238    1 u   10   64    1    1.475   -0.400 187.543
+129.250.35.250  10.17.100.238    2 u   11   64    1    1.342   -0.640 187.588
Both lpeers and opeers may be helpful as lpeers lists refid and jitter, while opeers lists clock dispersion.
Installing And Running chronyd

Kudu has been tested and is supported on machines whose local clock is synchronized with NTP using chronyd version 3.2 and newer.

The OS package is called chrony and contains both the NTP server chronyd and the chronyc command line utility. To install the chronyd NTP server and other utilities, use the appropriate command for your operating system:

OS Command

Debian/Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install chrony

RHEL/CentOS

sudo yum install chrony

If chronyd is installed but not yet running, start it using one of these commands (don’t forget to run chronyd -q first):

OS Command

Debian/Ubuntu

sudo service chrony restart

RHEL/CentOS

sudo service chronyd restart

By default, chronyd uses /etc/chrony.conf configuration file. The rtcsync option must be enabled in chrony.conf. Without rtcsync, the local machine’s clock will always be reported as unsynchronized and Kudu masters and tablet servers will not be able to start. The following code explains the observed behavior of chronyd when setting the synchronization status of the local clock on Linux.

As verified at RHEL7.5/CentOS7.5 with chronyd 3.2 and newer, the default configuration file is good enough to satisfy Kudu requirements for the system clock if running on a machine that has Internet access.

pool pool.ntp.org iburst
driftfile /var/lib/chrony/drift
makestep 1 3
rtcsync
Monitoring Clock Synchronization Status With The chrony Suite

When the chrony package is installed, you can monitor the synchronization status of the machine’s clock by running chronyc tracking (add -n option if no resolution of IP addresses back to FQDNs is desired: chronyc -n tracking).

For example, a system where chronyd hasn’t synchronized the local clock yet may report something like the following:

Reference ID    : 00000000 ()
Stratum         : 0
Ref time (UTC)  : Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970
System time     : 0.000000000 seconds fast of NTP time
Last offset     : +0.000000000 seconds
RMS offset      : 0.000000000 seconds
Frequency       : 69.422 ppm slow
Residual freq   : +0.000 ppm
Skew            : 0.000 ppm
Root delay      : 1.000000000 seconds
Root dispersion : 1.000000000 seconds
Update interval : 0.0 seconds
Leap status     : Not synchronised

A system with its local clock already synchronized may report:

Reference ID    : A9FEA9FE (169.254.169.254)
Stratum         : 3
Ref time (UTC)  : Tue Mar 03 06:33:23 2020
System time     : 0.000011798 seconds fast of NTP time
Last offset     : +0.000014285 seconds
RMS offset      : 0.001493311 seconds
Frequency       : 69.417 ppm slow
Residual freq   : +0.000 ppm
Skew            : 0.006 ppm
Root delay      : 0.000786347 seconds
Root dispersion : 0.000138749 seconds
Update interval : 1036.7 seconds
Leap status     : Normal

Note the following important pieces of output:

  • Root delay: the total of the network path delays (round trips) to the Stratum 1 server with which this chronyd instance is synchronized.

  • Root dispersion: the total dispersion accumulated through all the paths up to the Stratum 1 server with which this chronyd instance is synchronized.

  • Leap status: whether the local clock is synchronized with the true time up to the maximum error (see below). The Normal status means the clock is synchronized, and Not synchronised naturally means otherwise.

An absolute bound on the error of the clock maintained internally by chronyd at the time of the last NTP update can be expressed as:

clock_error <= abs(last_offset) + (root_delay / 2) + root_dispersion

chronyc sources reports on the list of reference NTP servers:

210 Number of sources = 4
MS Name/IP address         Stratum Poll Reach LastRx Last sample
===============================================================================
^* 169.254.169.254               2  10   377   371   +240us[ +254us] +/-  501us
^- 64.62.190.177                 3  11   377   102  +1033us[+1033us] +/-   81ms
^- 64.246.132.14                 1  11   377   129   +323us[ +323us] +/-   16ms
^- 184.105.182.16                2  10   377   130  -4719us[-4719us] +/-   55ms

To get more details on the measurement stats for reference NTP servers use chronyc sourcestats:

210 Number of sources = 4
Name/IP Address            NP  NR  Span  Frequency  Freq Skew  Offset  Std Dev
==============================================================================
169.254.169.254            46  27  323m     +0.000      0.006    +72ns    68us
64.62.190.177              12  10  224m     +0.071      0.050  +1240us   154us
64.246.132.14              21  13  326m     +0.012      0.030   +434us   230us
184.105.182.16              6   3   86m     +0.252      0.559  -5097us   306us

Use chronyc ntpdata [server] to get information on a particular reference server (or all servers if the server parameter is omitted):

Remote address  : 169.254.169.254 (A9FEA9FE)
Remote port     : 123
Local address   : 172.31.113.1 (AC1F7101)
Leap status     : Normal
Version         : 4
Mode            : Server
Stratum         : 2
Poll interval   : 10 (1024 seconds)
Precision       : -20 (0.000000954 seconds)
Root delay      : 0.000229 seconds
Root dispersion : 0.000107 seconds
Reference ID    : 474F4F47 ()
Reference time  : Tue Mar 03 06:33:24 2020
Offset          : -0.000253832 seconds
Peer delay      : 0.000557465 seconds
Peer dispersion : 0.000000987 seconds
Response time   : 0.000000001 seconds
Jitter asymmetry: +0.50
NTP tests       : 111 111 1111
Interleaved     : No
Authenticated   : No
TX timestamping : Daemon
RX timestamping : Kernel
Total TX        : 50
Total RX        : 50
Total valid RX  : 50

For troubleshooting tips on clock synchronisation with chronyd see this useful guide.

NTP Configuration Best Practices

In order to provide stable time synchronization with low maximum error, follow these best NTP configuration best practices.

Run ntpdate (or its alternatives ntpd -q or chronyd -q in case of chrony) prior to running the NTP server. If the offset of the local clock is too far from the true time, it can take a long time before the NTP server synchronizes the local clock, even if it’s allowed to perform step adjustments. So, after configuring ntpd or chronyd, first run the ntpdate tool with the same set of NTP servers or run ntpd -q/chronyd -q. It’s assumed that the NTP server is not running when ntpdate/ntpd -q/chronyd -q is run. On RHEL/CentOS, if using the ntp suite, enable the ntpdate service; if using the chrony suite, enable the chrony-wait service.

In certain public cloud environments, use the highly-available NTP server accessible via link-local IP address or other dedicated NTP server provided as a service. If your cluster is running in a public cloud environment, consult the cloud provider’s documentation for the recommended NTP setup. Both AWS and GCE clouds offer dedicated highly available NTP servers accessible from within a cloud instance via link-local IP address.

Unless using highly-available NTP reference server accessible via link-local address, always configure at least four time sources for NTP server at the local machine. In addition to providing redundancy in case one of time sources becomes unavailable, this might make the configuration more robust since the NTP is designed to increase its accuracy with a diversity of sources in networks with higher round-trip times and jitter.

Use the iburst option for faster synchronization at startup. The iburst option instructs the NTP server (both ntpd and chronyd) to send an initial "burst" of time queries at startup. This results in a faster synchronization of the ntpd/chronyd with their reference servers upon startup.

If the maximum clock error goes beyond the default threshold set by Kudu (10 seconds), consider setting lower value for the maxpoll option for every NTP server in ntp.conf/chrony.conf. For example, consider setting the maxpoll to 7 which will cause the NTP daemon to make requests to the corresponding NTP server at least every 128 seconds. The default maximum poll interval is 10 (1024 seconds) for both ntpd and chronyd.

If using custom maxpoll interval, don’t set maxpoll too low (e.g., lower than 6) to avoid flooding NTP servers, especially the public ones. Otherwise they may blacklist the client (i.e. the NTP daemon at your machine) and cease providing NTP service at all. If in doubt, consult the ntp.conf or chrony.conf manual page correspondingly.

Troubleshooting NTP Stability Problems

As of Kudu 1.6.0, both kudu-master and kudu-tserver are able to continue to operate during a brief loss of clock synchronization. If clock synchronization is lost for several hours, they may crash. If kudu-master or kudu-tserver process crashes due to clock synchronization issues, consult the ERROR log for a dump of related information which may help to diagnose the issue.

Kudu 1.5.0 and earlier versions were less resilient to brief NTP outages. In addition, they contained a bug which could cause Kudu to incorrectly measure the maximum error, resulting in crashes. If you experience crashes related to clock synchronization on these earlier versions of Kudu and it appears that the system’s NTP configuration is correct, consider upgrading to Kudu 1.6.0 or later.
If using other than link-local NTP servers, it may take some time for the NTP server running on a local machine to synchronize with one of its reference servers in case of network connectivity issues. In case of a spotty network between the machine and the reference NTP servers, ntpd/chronyd may become unsynchronized with its reference NTP servers. If that happens, consider finding other set of reference NTP servers: the best bet is to use NTP servers in the local network or *.pool.ntp.org servers.

Disk Space Usage

When using the log block manager (the default on Linux), Kudu uses sparse files to store data. A sparse file has a different apparent size than the actual amount of disk space it uses. This means that some tools may inaccurately report the disk space used by Kudu. For example, the size listed by ls -l does not accurately reflect the disk space used by Kudu data files:

$ ls -lh /data/kudu/tserver/data
total 117M
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 160M Mar 26 19:37 0b9807b8b17d48a6a7d5b16bf4ac4e6d.data
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 4.4K Mar 26 19:37 0b9807b8b17d48a6a7d5b16bf4ac4e6d.metadata
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu  32M Mar 26 19:37 2f26eeacc7e04b65a009e2c9a2a8bd20.data
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 4.3K Mar 26 19:37 2f26eeacc7e04b65a009e2c9a2a8bd20.metadata
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 672M Mar 26 19:37 30a2dd2cd3554d8a9613f588a8d136ff.data
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 4.4K Mar 26 19:37 30a2dd2cd3554d8a9613f588a8d136ff.metadata
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu  32M Mar 26 19:37 7434c83c5ec74ae6af5974e4909cbf82.data
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 4.3K Mar 26 19:37 7434c83c5ec74ae6af5974e4909cbf82.metadata
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 672M Mar 26 19:37 772d070347a04f9f8ad2ad3241440090.data
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 4.4K Mar 26 19:37 772d070347a04f9f8ad2ad3241440090.metadata
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 160M Mar 26 19:37 86e50a95531f46b6a79e671e6f5f4151.data
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu 4.4K Mar 26 19:37 86e50a95531f46b6a79e671e6f5f4151.metadata
-rw------- 1 kudu kudu  687 Mar 26 19:26 block_manager_instance

Notice that the total size reported is 117MiB, while the first file’s size is listed as 160MiB. Adding the -s option to ls will cause ls to output the file’s disk space usage.

The du and df utilities report the actual disk space usage by default.

$ du -h /data/kudu/tserver/data
118M   /data/kudu/tserver/data

The apparent size can be shown with the --apparent-size flag to du.

$ du -h --apparent-size /data/kudu/tserver/data
1.7G  /data/kudu/tserver/data

Reporting Kudu Crashes

Kudu uses the Google Breakpad library to generate a minidump whenever Kudu experiences a crash. These minidumps are typically only a few MB in size and are generated even if core dump generation is disabled. At this time, generating minidumps is only possible in Kudu on Linux builds.

A minidump file contains important debugging information about the process that crashed, including shared libraries loaded and their versions, a list of threads running at the time of the crash, the state of the processor registers and a copy of the stack memory for each thread, and CPU and operating system version information.

It is also possible to force Kudu to create a minidump without killing the process by sending a USR1 signal to the kudu-tserver or kudu-master process. For example:

sudo pkill -USR1 kudu-tserver

By default, Kudu stores its minidumps in a subdirectory of its configured glog directory called minidumps. This location can be customized by setting the --minidump_path flag. Kudu will retain only a certain number of minidumps before deleting the oldest ones, in an effort to avoid filling up the disk with minidump files. The maximum number of minidumps that will be retained can be controlled by setting the --max_minidumps gflag.

Minidumps contain information specific to the binary that created them and so are not usable without access to the exact binary that crashed, or a very similar binary. For more information on processing and using minidump files, see scripts/dump_breakpad_symbols.py.

A minidump can be emailed to a Kudu developer or attached to a JIRA in order to help a Kudu developer debug a crash. In order for it to be useful, the developer will need to know the exact version of Kudu and the operating system where the crash was observed. Note that while a minidump does not contain a heap memory dump, it does contain stack memory and therefore it is possible for application data to appear in a minidump. If confidential or personal information is stored on the cluster, do not share minidump files.

Performance Troubleshooting

Kudu Tracing

The kudu-master and kudu-tserver daemons include built-in tracing support based on the open source Chromium Tracing framework. You can use tracing to help diagnose latency issues or other problems on Kudu servers.

Accessing the tracing interface

The tracing interface is accessed via a web browser as part of the embedded web server in each of the Kudu daemons.

Table 1. Tracing Interface URLs
Daemon URL

Tablet Server

http://tablet-server-1.example.com:8050/tracing.html

Master

http://master-1.example.com:8051/tracing.html

The tracing interface is known to work in recent versions of Google Chrome. Other browsers may not work as expected.

Collecting a trace

After navigating to the tracing interface, click the Record button on the top left corner of the screen. When beginning to diagnose a problem, start by selecting all categories. Click Record to begin recording a trace.

During the trace collection, events are collected into an in-memory ring buffer. This ring buffer is fixed in size, so it will eventually fill up to 100%. However, new events are still being collected while older events are being removed. While recording the trace, trigger the behavior or workload you are interested in exploring.

After collecting for several seconds, click Stop. The collected trace will be downloaded and displayed. Use the ? key to display help text about using the tracing interface to explore the trace.

Saving a trace

You can save collected traces as JSON files for later analysis by clicking Save after collecting the trace. To load and analyze a saved JSON file, click Load and choose the file.

RPC Timeout Traces

If client applications are experiencing RPC timeouts, the Kudu tablet server WARNING level logs should contain a log entry which includes an RPC-level trace. For example:

W0922 00:56:52.313848 10858 inbound_call.cc:193] Call kudu.consensus.ConsensusService.UpdateConsensus
from 192.168.1.102:43499 (request call id 3555909) took 1464ms (client timeout 1000).
W0922 00:56:52.314888 10858 inbound_call.cc:197] Trace:
0922 00:56:50.849505 (+     0us) service_pool.cc:97] Inserting onto call queue
0922 00:56:50.849527 (+    22us) service_pool.cc:158] Handling call
0922 00:56:50.849574 (+    47us) raft_consensus.cc:1008] Updating replica for 2 ops
0922 00:56:50.849628 (+    54us) raft_consensus.cc:1050] Early marking committed up to term: 8 index: 880241
0922 00:56:50.849968 (+   340us) raft_consensus.cc:1056] Triggering prepare for 2 ops
0922 00:56:50.850119 (+   151us) log.cc:420] Serialized 1555 byte log entry
0922 00:56:50.850213 (+    94us) raft_consensus.cc:1131] Marking committed up to term: 8 index: 880241
0922 00:56:50.850218 (+     5us) raft_consensus.cc:1148] Updating last received op as term: 8 index: 880243
0922 00:56:50.850219 (+     1us) raft_consensus.cc:1195] Filling consensus response to leader.
0922 00:56:50.850221 (+     2us) raft_consensus.cc:1169] Waiting on the replicates to finish logging
0922 00:56:52.313763 (+1463542us) raft_consensus.cc:1182] finished
0922 00:56:52.313764 (+     1us) raft_consensus.cc:1190] UpdateReplicas() finished
0922 00:56:52.313788 (+    24us) inbound_call.cc:114] Queueing success response

These traces can give an indication of which part of the request was slow. Please include them in bug reports related to RPC latency outliers.

Kernel Stack Watchdog Traces

Each Kudu server process has a background thread called the Stack Watchdog, which monitors the other threads in the server in case they have blocked for longer-than-expected periods of time. These traces can indicate operating system issues or bottlenecked storage.

When the watchdog thread identifies a case of thread blockage, it logs an entry in the WARNING log like the following:

W0921 23:51:54.306350 10912 kernel_stack_watchdog.cc:111] Thread 10937 stuck at /data/kudu/consensus/log.cc:505 for 537ms:
Kernel stack:
[<ffffffffa00b209d>] do_get_write_access+0x29d/0x520 [jbd2]
[<ffffffffa00b2471>] jbd2_journal_get_write_access+0x31/0x50 [jbd2]
[<ffffffffa00fe6d8>] __ext4_journal_get_write_access+0x38/0x80 [ext4]
[<ffffffffa00d9b23>] ext4_reserve_inode_write+0x73/0xa0 [ext4]
[<ffffffffa00d9b9c>] ext4_mark_inode_dirty+0x4c/0x1d0 [ext4]
[<ffffffffa00d9e90>] ext4_dirty_inode+0x40/0x60 [ext4]
[<ffffffff811ac48b>] __mark_inode_dirty+0x3b/0x160
[<ffffffff8119c742>] file_update_time+0xf2/0x170
[<ffffffff8111c1e0>] __generic_file_aio_write+0x230/0x490
[<ffffffff8111c4c8>] generic_file_aio_write+0x88/0x100
[<ffffffffa00d3fb1>] ext4_file_write+0x61/0x1e0 [ext4]
[<ffffffff81180f5b>] do_sync_readv_writev+0xfb/0x140
[<ffffffff81181ee6>] do_readv_writev+0xd6/0x1f0
[<ffffffff81182046>] vfs_writev+0x46/0x60
[<ffffffff81182102>] sys_pwritev+0xa2/0xc0
[<ffffffff8100b072>] system_call_fastpath+0x16/0x1b
[<ffffffffffffffff>] 0xffffffffffffffff

User stack:
    @       0x3a1ace10c4  (unknown)
    @          0x1262103  (unknown)
    @          0x12622d4  (unknown)
    @          0x12603df  (unknown)
    @           0x8e7bfb  (unknown)
    @           0x8f478b  (unknown)
    @           0x8f55db  (unknown)
    @          0x12a7b6f  (unknown)
    @       0x3a1b007851  (unknown)
    @       0x3a1ace894d  (unknown)
    @              (nil)  (unknown)

These traces can be useful for diagnosing root-cause latency issues when they are caused by systems below Kudu, such as disk controllers or filesystems.

Memory Limits

Kudu has a hard and soft memory limit. The hard memory limit is the maximum amount a Kudu process is allowed to use, and is controlled by the --memory_limit_hard_bytes flag. The soft memory limit is a percentage of the hard memory limit, controlled by the flag memory_limit_soft_percentage and with a default value of 80%, that determines the amount of memory a process may use before it will start rejecting some write operations.

If the logs or RPC traces contain messages like

Service unavailable: Soft memory limit exceeded (at 96.35% of capacity)

then Kudu is rejecting writes due to memory backpressure. This may result in write timeouts. There are several ways to relieve the memory pressure on Kudu:

  • If the host has more memory available for Kudu, increase --memory_limit_hard_bytes.

  • Increase the rate at which Kudu can flush writes from memory to disk by increasing the number of disks or increasing the number of maintenance manager threads --maintenance_manager_num_threads. Generally, the recommended ratio of maintenance manager threads to data directories is 1:3.

  • Reduce the volume of writes flowing to Kudu on the application side.

Finally, on versions of Kudu prior to 1.8, check the value of --block_cache_capacity_mb. This setting determines the maximum size of Kudu’s block cache. While a higher value can help with read and write performance, do not raise --block_cache_capacity_mb above the memory pressure threshold, which is --memory_pressure_percentage (default 60%) of --memory_limit_hard_bytes, as this will cause Kudu to flush aggressively even if write throughput is low. Keeping --block_cache_capacity_mb below 50% of the memory pressure threshold is recommended. With the defaults, this means --block_cache_capacity_mb should not exceed 30% of --memory_limit_hard_bytes. On Kudu 1.8 and higher, servers will refuse to start if the block cache capacity exceeds the memory pressure threshold.

Block Cache Size

Kudu uses an LRU cache for recently read data. On workloads that scan a subset of the data repeatedly, raising the size of this cache can offer significant performance benefits. To increase the amount of memory dedicated to the block cache, increase the value of the flag --block_cache_capacity_mb. The default is 512MiB.

Kudu provides a set of useful metrics for evaluating the performance of the block cache, which can be found on the /metrics endpoint of the web UI. An example set:

{
  "name": "block_cache_inserts",
  "value": 64
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_lookups",
  "value": 512
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_evictions",
  "value": 0
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_misses",
  "value": 96
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_misses_caching",
  "value": 64
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_hits",
  "value": 0
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_hits_caching",
  "value": 352
},
{
  "name": "block_cache_usage",
  "value": 6976
}

To judge the efficiency of the block cache on a tablet server, first wait until the server has been running and serving normal requests for some time, so the cache is not cold. Unless the server stores very little data or is idle, block_cache_usage should be equal or nearly equal to block_cache_capacity_mb. Once the cache has reached steady state, compare block_cache_lookups to block_cache_misses_caching. The latter metric counts the number of blocks that Kudu expected to read from cache but which weren’t found in the cache. If a significant amount of lookups result in misses on expected cache hits, and the block_cache_evictions metric is significant compared to block_cache_inserts, then raising the size of the block cache may provide a performance boost. However, the utility of the block cache is highly dependent on workload, so it’s necessary to test the benefits of a larger block cache.

Do not raise the block cache size --block_cache_capacity_mb higher than the memory pressure threshold (defaults to 60% of --memory_limit_hard_bytes). As this would cause poor flushing behavior, Kudu servers version 1.8 and higher will refuse to start when misconfigured in this way.

Heap Sampling

For advanced debugging of memory usage, released builds of Kudu enable Heap Sampling by default. This allows Kudu developers to associate memory usage with the specific lines of code and data structures responsible. When reporting a bug related to memory usage or an apparent memory leak, heap profiling can give quantitative data to pinpoint the issue.

If heap sampling is enabled, the current sampled heap occupancy can be retrieved over HTTP by visiting http://tablet-server.example.com:8050/pprof/heap or http://master.example.com:8051/pprof/heap. The output is a machine-readable dump of the stack traces with their associated heap usage.

Rather than visiting the heap profile page directly in a web browser, it is typically more useful to use the pprof tool that is distributed as part of the gperftools open source project. For example, a developer with a local build tree can use the following command to collect the sampled heap usage and output an SVG diagram:

thirdparty/installed/uninstrumented/bin/pprof -svg  'http://localhost:8051/pprof/heap' > /tmp/heap.svg

The resulting SVG may be visualized in a web browser or sent to the Kudu community to help troubleshoot memory occupancy issues.

Heap samples contain only summary information about allocations and do not contain any data from the heap. It is safe to share heap samples in public without fear of exposing confidential or sensitive data.

Slow DNS Lookups and nscd

For better scalability on nodes hosting many replicas, we recommend that you use nscd (name service cache daemon) to cache both DNS name resolution and static name resolution (via /etc/hosts).

When DNS lookups are slow, you will see a log message similar to the following:

W0926 11:19:01.339553 27231 net_util.cc:193] Time spent resolve address for kudu-tserver.example.com: real 4.647s    user 0.000s     sys 0.000s

nscd (name service cache daemon) can alleviate slow name resolution by providing a cache for the most common name service requests, such as for passwords, groups, and hosts.

Refer to your operating system documentation for how to install and enable nscd.

Issues using Kudu

ClassNotFoundException: com.cloudera.kudu.hive.KuduStorageHandler

Users will encounter this exception when trying to use a Kudu table via Hive. This is not a case of a missing jar, but simply that Impala stores Kudu metadata in Hive in a format that’s unreadable to other tools, including Hive itself and Spark. There is no workaround for Hive users. Spark users need to create temporary tables.

Runtime error: Could not create thread: Resource temporarily unavailable (error 11)

Users will encounter this error when Kudu is unable to create more threads, usually on versions of Kudu older than 1.7. It happens on tablet servers, and is a sign that the tablet server hosts too many tablet replicas. To fix the issue, users can raise the nproc ulimit as detailed in the documentation for their operating system or distribution. However, the better solution is to reduce the number of replicas on the tablet server. This may involve rethinking the table’s partitioning schema. For the recommended limits on number of replicas per tablet server, see the known issues and scaling limitations documentation for the appropriate Kudu release. The releases page has links to documentation for previous versions of Kudu; for the latest release, see the known issues page.

Tombstoned or STOPPED tablet replicas

Users may notice some replicas on a tablet server are in a STOPPED state, and remain on the server indefinitely. These replicas are tombstones. A tombstone indicates that the tablet server once held a bona fide replica of its tablet. For example, if a tablet server goes down and its replicas are re-replicated elsewhere, if the tablet server rejoins the cluster its replicas will become tombstones. A tombstone will remain until the table it belongs to is deleted, or a new replica of the same tablet is placed on the tablet server. A count of tombstoned replicas and details of each one are available on the /tablets page of the tablet server web UI.

The Raft consensus algorithm that Kudu uses for replication requires tombstones for correctness in certain rare situations. They consume minimal resources and hold no data. They must not be deleted.

Corruption: checksum error on CFile block

In versions prior to Kudu 1.8.0, if the data on disk becomes corrupt, users will encounter warnings containing "Corruption: checksum error on CFile block" in the tablet server logs and client side errors when trying to scan tablets with corrupt CFile blocks. Fixing this corruption is a manual process.

To fix the issue, users can first identify all the affected tablets by running a checksum scan on the affected tables or tablets using the ksck tool.

sudo -u kudu kudu cluster ksck <master_addresses> -checksum_scan -tables=<tables>
sudo -u kudu kudu cluster ksck <master_addresses> -checksum_scan -tablets=<tablets>

If there is at least one replica for each tablet that does not return a corruption error, you can repair the bad copies by deleting them and forcing them to be re-replicated from the leader using the remote_replica delete tool.

sudo -u kudu kudu remote_replica delete <tserver_address> <tablet_id> "Cfile Corruption"

If all of the replica are corrupt, then some data loss has occurred. Until KUDU-2526 is completed this can happen if the corrupt replica became the leader and the existing follower replicas are replaced.

If data has been lost, you can repair the table by replacing the corrupt tablet with an empty one using the unsafe_replace_tablet tool.

sudo -u kudu kudu tablet unsafe_replace_tablet <master_addresses> <tablet_id>

From versions 1.8.0 onwards, Kudu will mark the affected replicas as failed, leading to their automatic re-replication elsewhere.

Symbolizing stack traces

Sometimes you might see the following in the logs:

0323 03:59:31.091198 (+607857us) spinlock_profiling.cc:243] Waited 492 ms on lock 0x4cb0960. stack: 0000000002398852 0000000000ad8c69 0000000000aa62ba 000000000221aaa8 000000000221b1a8 00000000023a8f83 00007fa8b818be24 00007fa8b646a34c

That’s usually a sign of high contention among threads to acquire a lock, and in this case the reported time shows how long a thread spent on a CPU before acquiring the lock. The call stack addresses listed helps to restore the stack trace of the waiting thread and pinpoint the problem in the code.

It’s possible to translate the addresses into the name of functions and lines in the code having the binary that produced the output (in this example, it’s kudu-master). If the binary is stripped of symbols and debug information, it’s possible do so as well if separate debug information for the binary is available.

Assuming both the stripped release binary and the debug information are available as RPMs, unpack them into a directory (e.g., sysroot):

$ mkdir sysroot && cd sysroot
$ rpm2cpio ../kudu-1.10.0.el7.x86_64.rpm | cpio -idmv
$ rpm2cpio ../kudu-debuginfo-1.10.0.el7.x86_64.rpm | cpio -idmv

Use addr2line to find the line in the code for the stack address (in case if the binary is not stripped of debug information, supply the actual binary with -e option instead of the debug info file):

addr2line -C -f -e usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/kudu/sbin-release/kudu-master.debug 0x0000000000aa62ba
kudu::master::MasterServiceImpl::ConnectToMaster(kudu::master::ConnectToMasterRequestPB const*, kudu::master::ConnectToMasterResponsePB*, kudu::rpc::RpcContext*)
/usr/src/debug/kudu-1.10.0/src/kudu/master/master_service.cc:504

To achieve the same with gdb, first find the address of the .text section in the symbol file (in the example, 0000000000a2cdb0):

$ readelf -S usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/kudu/sbin-release/kudu-master.debug | grep .text
  [13] .text             NOBITS           0000000000a2cdb0  000002c0

Then start up gdb, pointing it to the kudu-master executable (that’s the executable that produced the output in the log file):

gdb usr/lib/kudu/sbin-release/kudu-master

Now load the .debug symbols into gdb using the address found above, tell gdb where to find source files, and set the sysroot:

(gdb) add-symbol-file usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/kudu/sbin-release/kudu-master.debug 0x0000000000a2cdb0
(gdb) set substitute-path /usr/src/debug/kudu-1.10.0 usr/src/debug/kudu-1.10.0
(gdb) set sysroot .

To translate the address into line number and function information, use info line * <address>:

(gdb) info line * 0x0000000000aa62ba
Line 504 of "/usr/src/debug/kudu-1.10.0/src/kudu/master/master_service.cc"
   starts at address 0xaa62af <kudu::master::MasterServiceImpl::ConnectToMaster(kudu::master::ConnectToMasterRequestPB const*, kudu::master::ConnectToMasterResponsePB*, kudu::rpc::RpcContext*)+47>
   and ends at 0xaa62bb <kudu::master::MasterServiceImpl::ConnectToMaster(kudu::master::ConnectToMasterRequestPB const*, kudu::master::ConnectToMasterResponsePB*, kudu::rpc::RpcContext*)+59>.