Files
seaweedfs/weed/shell/command_ec_balance.go
Chris Lu 79ac279fe1 fix(ec): don't mix EC shards from different encode runs (#9880)
* feat(ec): add encode_ts_ns to EC shard metadata and the shard read RPC

EcShardConfig and VolumeEcShardReadRequest gain an int64 encode_ts_ns
(encode time in unix nanos). It rides in .vif and the read request so a
read can be scoped to the encode run that produced the index.

* fix(ec): stamp each encode and reject cross-run shard reads

Generate stamps EncodeTsNs into the volume's .vif. Reads carry it to the
shard's owning volume (resolved together via FindEcVolumeWithShard, so a
multi-disk server validates the disk that actually serves the bytes) and
reject a shard from a different encode run, recovering from parity. A
zero on either side (pre-upgrade volume) skips the guard.

* fix(ec): stamp the encode identity on the worker-generated .vif

The worker-local encode path now writes EncodeTsNs (and the resolved EC
ratio) into the .vif, so the read guard is not silently off for volumes
encoded by the maintenance worker.

* fix(ec): wipe stale EC artifacts before re-encoding

VolumeEcShardsGenerate evicts any in-memory EcVolume for the volume and
removes its on-disk shard/index/sidecar files before writing fresh ones,
so a retried encode never builds on a partial prior run and the unlink
frees the inodes instead of leaving open fds serving old bytes.

* fix(ec): unmount EC shards across all disks

UnmountEcShards walked only the first disk holding the shard, leaving a
duplicate copy mounted on a sibling disk (split-disk reconciled volumes)
still serving and heartbeating. Traverse every disk and emit one
deletion delta per disk.

* fix(ec): delete orphan shards without a local .ecx

deleteEcShardIdsForEachLocation gated shard-file removal on a local .ecx,
so it could not clean an orphan .ecNN left by a failed copy on a disk
with no index. Delete the requested shard files unconditionally; the
index-file (.ecx/.ecj/.vif) routing stays gated as before.

* fix(ec): clear stale EC shards cluster-wide before re-encoding

ec.encode unmounts and deletes EC shards for the target volumes on every
node before regenerating: fatal for the shards the topology reports
(mounted leftovers), best-effort for the rest (a sweep that catches
unmounted failed-copy orphans). A down node is a no-op.

* fix(ec): don't nil EC fds on close so reads can't race eviction

A reader resolves an EcVolume/shard under the lock then reads after it is
released, so an eviction that nils ecxFile/ecdFile would race that read
and panic. Close the fds without nilling the fields: the field is now
write-once (no data race) and a concurrent read hits a closed fd, getting
a clean error that the caller recovers from parity.

* fix(ec): wipe stale EC artifacts on every disk and surface failures

The pre-encode wipe only deleted beside the source volume, so a stale
shard on a sibling disk survived and could be mounted against the new
index at reconcile. Sweep every disk. Removal also ignored os.Remove
errors, reporting a failed cleanup as success and letting a stale shard
join the next generation; surface the first real failure (treating
already-gone as success) from removeStaleEcArtifacts and the shard delete.

* fix(ec): log when a local shard is skipped for a different encode run

The cross-run guard returned errShardNotLocal, indistinguishable in logs
from a genuinely-absent shard. Add a V(1) line naming both EncodeTsNs so
operators can tell "wrong encode generation" from "shard not here".

* fix(ec): surface metadata removal failures in the shard delete path

deleteEcShardIdsForEachLocation still dropped os.Remove errors on the
.ecx/.ecj/.vif/sidecar cleanup. A surviving stale .ecx is the orphan-index
condition this path prevents, so route those through removeFileIfExists and
return the first real failure instead of reporting cleanup as success.

* fix(ec): fail orphan cleanup when a reachable node's delete fails

The pre-encode orphan sweep swallowed every error for unreported (node,
volume) pairs. That is only safe for an unreachable node, which cannot
receive this encode's new generation. A reachable node whose delete
genuinely failed (permission/IO) keeps an orphan shard that a later copy
re-stamps with the new run's volume-level .vif identity, so the read guard
would accept stale data. Surface those; stay best-effort only for
unreachable nodes (gRPC Unavailable / no status).

* fix(ec): guard ecjFile under its lock in the EC delete path

EcVolume.Close nils ecjFile under ecjFileAccessLock; a delete that resolved
its .ecx lookup before a concurrent eviction (the generate-time
UnloadEcVolume) could then reach the journal append with a nil fd. Bail
with a clear "volume closed" error under the lock instead.

* fix(ec): reject an unstamped shard when the caller has an encode identity

The read guard required both identities nonzero, so a current (stamped)
caller accepted a holder with identity 0 and could be served a stale
pre-upgrade shard. Reject when the caller is stamped and the holder
differs (including unstamped); stay lenient only when the caller itself
has no identity (pre-upgrade reader). A skipped shard recovers from parity.

* fix(ec): full-teardown delete so cluster cleanup wipes a whole generation

The pre-encode cluster sweep deleted only the listed canonical shards on
remote nodes, leaving index/sidecar (and, on builds with versioned
generations, those too) behind. Add a full_teardown flag to
VolumeEcShardsDelete that evicts the volume and wipes every EC artifact for
it on every disk via removeStaleEcArtifacts; the shell and worker pre-encode
cleanup paths set it. Other delete callers (balance/decode/repair) are
unchanged.

* fix(ec): take ecjFileAccessLock before the nil-check in Sync and Close

Sync and Close read ev.ecjFile before acquiring ecjFileAccessLock while
Close nils it under the lock, a data race on the field. Take the lock
first, then nil-check inside, in both.

* fix(ec): acknowledge full_teardown so a pre-upgrade server can't fake success

An old volume server silently ignores full_teardown and returns success
for an ordinary delete, so the caller wrongly believes the generation was
wiped and copies a fresh gen-0 onto an unwiped node. Echo full_teardown_done
in the response; the worker destination cleanup fails when it is absent, and
the shell cluster sweep fails for a reported (mounted) leftover while staying
best-effort for an unreported node. encode_ts_ns stays an accepted transient
(an old server just skips the new read guard, no regression).

* fix(ec): fail the pre-encode sweep for any reachable node that can't ack teardown

A reachable pre-upgrade server ignores full_teardown and returns success
without wiping an orphan, which a later copy then folds into the new
generation. Treat a missing full_teardown_done ack as fatal for every
reachable node (best-effort only for a gRPC-unreachable one), not just for
topology-reported pairs.

* fix(ec): return the served shard identity and validate it client-side

The encode identity was only enforced server-side, so a pre-upgrade server
ignored the request field and served bytes unchecked. Echo the served
shard's EncodeTsNs on every read response chunk and have the client reject a
mismatch (including 0 from an old server), so the guard holds regardless of
server version; a rejected read recovers from parity.

* fix(ec): reject a short/empty remote shard read instead of serving zeros

doReadRemoteEcShardInterval accepted an immediate EOF or a short stream and
returned success with a partly zero-filled, unvalidated buffer (the server
stamps the identity only on chunks that carry bytes). A non-deleted interval
must arrive whole: require n == len(buf), exempting the is_deleted
short-circuit (n=0), matching readLocalEcShardInterval's local check. A short
read now fails so the caller recovers from parity.

* test(ec): fake volume server echoes the full_teardown acknowledgement

The worker now fails a teardown delete that isn't acknowledged (so a
pre-upgrade server can't silently skip the wipe). The fake server's no-op
VolumeEcShardsDelete returned an empty response, which the worker read as a
skipped teardown and aborted the encode. Echo full_teardown_done.

* feat(ec): mirror the encode-run identity guard + full_teardown into the Rust volume server

The Go volume server stamps an encode-run identity (encode_ts_ns) into the .vif
and rejects a read served from a shard of a different run; full_teardown wipes a
whole generation and acknowledges it. The Rust volume server had none of it.
Mirror the shared logic: load encode_ts_ns from the .vif onto the EcVolume,
stamp it on every read response, and reject a request/response mismatch on both
the server and the distributed-read client (recovering from parity); handle
full_teardown by evicting the volume and wiping every EC artifact on each disk,
echoing full_teardown_done so the caller can detect a server that ignored it.

* fix(ec): remove a stale .vif on full teardown of a shard-only node

A shard copy installs shards + .ecx before .vif, so an interrupted copy after a
teardown could mount the new files under the previous run's identity / version /
shard ratio / dat_file_size carried by the surviving .vif. Remove .vif during
full teardown, gated on .idx absence so a source-volume holder keeps its live
.vif. In Rust this lives in a teardown-only helper so the reconcile / load-
fallback paths (which share the base removal) still preserve .vif.

* fix(ec): treat a missing teardown ack as fatal, not as an unreachable node

isNodeUnreachable returned true for any non-gRPC-status error, so a reachable
pre-upgrade server's missing full_teardown_done ack (a plain error) was
classified unreachable and the unreported pair was silently skipped. Classify
only a real codes.Unavailable as unreachable, and wrap the missing ack in a
sentinel the sweep treats as fatal regardless. A genuinely down node still
surfaces as Unavailable from the RPC and stays best-effort.

* fix(ec): reject a short shard read in the local EC needle reader

read_ec_shard_needle ignored the byte count from shard.read_at and appended the
whole pre-sized buffer, so a truncated shard's zero-filled tail passed the later
length check and parsed as garbage. Require n == buf.len() per interval, erroring
on a short read like the local interval reader already does.

* fix(ec): probe reachability before skipping a node that returns Unavailable

The pre-encode sweep skipped any node whose teardown delete returned
codes.Unavailable, but a reachable volume server in maintenance mode also
returns that code for the maintenance-gated delete, so its stale EC files were
left behind on a node that can still receive the new generation. Confirm with a
non-maintenance-gated empty-target Ping: skip only when the node fails the probe
too (genuinely unreachable).

* fix(ec): use try_exists for the teardown .vif .idx guard

The teardown-only .vif removal gated on Path::exists(), which returns false on a
permission/IO stat error, so a stat failure on a present .idx would read as a
shard-only node and delete the live source volume's .vif. Gate on
try_exists() == Ok(false) instead, preserving the sidecar on any stat error.

* fix(ec): only skip a sweep node when a Ping confirms it is transport-down

The pre-encode sweep skipped a node whenever its teardown delete and a liveness
Ping both failed, but it treated ANY Ping error as down — an application-level
Internal/ResourceExhausted, or Unimplemented from a pre-Ping server, left a
reachable node's stale generation in place. Classify the Ping tri-state and skip
only when it transport-fails with codes.Unavailable; a reachable or inconclusive
node stays fatal.

* fix(ec): exclude sweep-skipped nodes from the encode's rebalance

The pre-encode sweep skips a genuinely-down node best-effort, but the rebalance
then recollected the current topology — a node that recovered between the two
could become a copy target and receive the new generation while still holding
its stale, never-cleared shards. Have the sweep return the skipped set and
exclude those nodes from the rebalance for this encode, so a node we could not
clean cannot receive the new generation. Standalone ec.balance is unaffected.

* fix(ec): re-sweep recovered nodes before generation so they aren't stranded

A node skipped as down by the pre-encode sweep is excluded from the rebalance,
but it can recover and become the generation host — mounting all shards locally,
then being excluded from distribution. Union-only verification accepts all
shards on one node and deletes the originals: a single point of failure. Re-sweep
the skipped nodes just before generation; one whose teardown now succeeds leaves
the skipped set and rebalances normally, while a node still down stays skipped.

* fix(ec): abort the encode if a selected source is still skipped after re-sweep

The re-sweep un-skips a recovered node, but the source was selected before it and
a node can stay down through the re-sweep then recover just in time to be the
generation host — mounting all shards locally while still excluded from the
rebalance, which union-only verification accepts before deleting the originals.
Abort the encode when a selected source remains skipped after the re-sweep.

* fix(ec): batch delete returns retriable 503 when a volume became EC mid-batch

If a volume is not EC at the batch-delete classification but is encoded to EC and
its .dat deleted before the regular-volume mutation, the mutation returns an exact
"not found" that the filer chunk-GC treats as completed, dropping the delete.
Recheck EC presence under the mutation lock and return a retriable 503 with the
"try again" token so the filer requeues it onto the EC path.

* fix(ec): recheck EC state before the regular batch-delete mutation

ec.encode mounts EC shards (copied from the .dat) before deleting the originals,
so a volume can be EC while its .dat still exists. The batch delete only rechecked
EC after a NotFound, so a successful regular-volume delete in that window wrote a
tombstone to the soon-removed .dat — the delete was lost and the needle resurrected
from the pre-tombstone shards. Recheck has_ec_volume under the write lock before
delete_volume_needle and return a retriable 503 so the filer requeues onto the EC path.

* fix(volume): make the metrics push test independent of test order

test_push_metrics_once asserted the pushed body contains the request-counter
family without ever touching the counter — a CounterVec with no children emits
nothing, so the assertion only held when another test had already created a
labelset in the shared registry. Create one in the test itself.
2026-06-10 22:31:18 -07:00

80 lines
2.6 KiB
Go

package shell
import (
"flag"
"io"
"github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/weed/glog"
"github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/weed/storage/types"
)
func init() {
Commands = append(Commands, &commandEcBalance{})
}
type commandEcBalance struct {
}
func (c *commandEcBalance) Name() string {
return "ec.balance"
}
func (c *commandEcBalance) Help() string {
return `balance all ec shards among all racks and volume servers
ec.balance [-c EACH_COLLECTION|<collection_name>] [-apply] [-dataCenter <data_center>] [-shardReplicaPlacement <replica_placement>] [-diskType <disk_type>]
Options:
-diskType: the disk type for EC shards (hdd, ssd, or empty for default hdd)
Algorithm:
` + ecBalanceAlgorithmDescription
}
func (c *commandEcBalance) HasTag(CommandTag) bool {
return false
}
func (c *commandEcBalance) Do(args []string, commandEnv *CommandEnv, writer io.Writer) (err error) {
balanceCommand := flag.NewFlagSet(c.Name(), flag.ContinueOnError)
collection := balanceCommand.String("collection", "EACH_COLLECTION", "collection name, or \"EACH_COLLECTION\" for each collection")
dc := balanceCommand.String("dataCenter", "", "only apply the balancing for this dataCenter")
shardReplicaPlacement := balanceCommand.String("shardReplicaPlacement", "", "replica placement for EC shards, or master default if empty")
diskTypeStr := balanceCommand.String("diskType", "", "the disk type for EC shards (hdd, ssd, or empty for default hdd)")
maxParallelization := balanceCommand.Int("maxParallelization", DefaultMaxParallelization, "run up to X tasks in parallel, whenever possible")
applyBalancing := balanceCommand.Bool("apply", false, "apply the balancing plan")
// TODO: remove this alias
applyBalancingAlias := balanceCommand.Bool("force", false, "apply the balancing plan (alias for -apply)")
if err = balanceCommand.Parse(args); err != nil {
return nil
}
handleDeprecatedForceFlag(writer, balanceCommand, applyBalancingAlias, applyBalancing)
infoAboutSimulationMode(writer, *applyBalancing, "-apply")
if err = commandEnv.confirmIsLocked(args); err != nil {
return
}
var collections []string
if *collection == "EACH_COLLECTION" {
collections, err = ListCollectionNames(commandEnv, false, true)
if err != nil {
return err
}
} else {
collections = append(collections, *collection)
}
glog.V(1).Infof("balanceEcVolumes collections %+v\n", len(collections))
rp, err := parseReplicaPlacementArg(commandEnv, *shardReplicaPlacement)
if err != nil {
return err
}
diskType := types.ToDiskType(*diskTypeStr)
return EcBalance(commandEnv, collections, *dc, rp, diskType, *maxParallelization, *applyBalancing, nil)
}