Troubleshooting with the crate-node command

This document shows you how to troubleshoot CrateDB nodes with the crate-node command. Using this command, you can:

  • Repurpose nodes and clean up their old data

  • Force the election of a master node (and the creation of a new cluster) in the event that you lose too many nodes to be able to form a quorum

  • Detach nodes from an old cluster so they can be moved to a new cluster

Table of contents

Repurpose a node

In a situation where you have irrecoverably lost the majority of the master-eligible nodes in a cluster, you may need to form a new cluster.

When forming a new cluster, you may have to change the role of one or more nodes. Changing the role of a node is referred to as repurposing a node.

Each node checks the contents of its data path at startup. If CrateDB discovers unexpected data, it will refuse to start. Specifically:

  • Nodes configured with node.data set to false will refuse to start if they find any shard data at startup

  • Nodes configured with both node.master set to false and node.data set to false will refuse to start if they have any index metadata at startup

The crate-node repurpose command can help you clean up the necessary node data so that CrateDB can be restarted with a new role.

Procedure

To repurpose a node, first of all, you must stop the node.

Then, update the settings node.data and node.master in the crate.yml configuration file as needed.

The node.data and node.master settings can be configured in four different ways, each corresponding to a different type of node:

Role

Configuration

After repurposing

Shard data

Index metadata

Master-eligible

node.data: true
node.master: true

Master-only

node.master: true
node.data: false

Deleted

Data-only

node.data: true
node.master: false

Deleted

Coordination-only

node.data: false
node.master: false

Deleted

Deleted

The final column in the above table indicates what data (if any) will be deleted (i.e., “cleaned up”) after repurposing the node to that configuration.

Warning

Before running the repurpose command, make sure that any data you want to keep is available on other nodes in the cluster.

Then, run the repurpose command:

sh$ ./bin/crate-node repurpose

Found 2 shards in 2 tables to clean up.
Use -v to see a list of paths and tables affected.
Node is being repurposed as master and no-data. Clean-up of shard data will
be performed.

Do you want to proceed?

Confirm [y/N] y
Node successfully repurposed to master and no data.

As mentioned in the command output, you can pass in -v to get a more verbose output, like so:

sh$ ./bin/crate-node repurpose -v

Finally, start the node again.

The node has been successfully repurposed.

Perform an unsafe cluster bootstrap

When communication is lost between one or more nodes in a cluster (e.g., during a cluster partition), the situation is assumed to be temporary and safeguards exist to prevent the election of a master node unless a quorum can be established.

However, if the situation is permanent (i.e., you have irrecoverably lost a majority of the nodes in your cluster), you will need to force the election of a master. Forcing a master election without quorum is referred to as an unsafe cluster bootstrap.

The crate-node unsafe-bootstrap command can help you choose a new master node and subsequently perform an unsafe cluster bootstrap.

Warning

An unsafe bootstrap should be your last resort.

When you perform an unsafe bootstrap, you are effectively abandoning the data on any unreachable nodes. This may result in arbitrary data loss and inconsistencies.

Before you attempt this, we recommend you try one or both of the following:

  1. Build a new cluster from a recent snapshot and then re-import any data that was ingested since the snapshot was taken.

  2. Recreate lost nodes using a copy of the data kept in the CRATE_HOME directory, if you still have access to the file system.

Procedure

Before you continue, you must stop all master-eligible nodes in the cluster.

Caution

The unsafe-bootstrap command will return an error message if the node you issue it from is still running. However, it does not check the running status of any other nodes in the cluster. You must verify the cluster state for yourself before proceeding.

Once all master-eligible nodes in the cluster have been stopped, you can manually select a new master.

To help you select a new master, the unsafe-bootstrap command returns information about the node cluster state as a pair of values in the form (term, version).

You can gather this information (safely) by issuing the unsafe-bootstrap command and answering “no” (n) at the confirmation prompt, like so:

sh$ ./bin/crate-node unsafe-bootstrap

WARNING: CrateDB MUST be stopped before running this tool.

Current node cluster state (term, version) pair is (4, 12)

Do you want to proceed?

Confirm [y/N] n

Here, the node cluster state has a term value of 4 and a version value of 12.

Run this command on every master-eligible node in the cluster (making sure to answer “no” each time) and make a note of each respective value pair.

Once you’re done, select the node with the highest term value. If multiple nodes share the highest term value, select the one with the highest version value. If multiple nodes share the highest term value and the highest version value, select any one of them.

Note

Selecting the node with the highest state values (per the above) ensures that you elect a master node with the freshest state data. This, in turn, minimizes the potential for data loss and inconsistency.

Once you have selected a node to elect to master, run the unsafe-bootstrap command on that node and answer yes (y) at the confirmation prompt:

sh$ ./bin/crate-node unsafe-bootstrap

WARNING: CrateDB MUST be stopped before running this tool.

Current node cluster state (term, version) pair is (4, 12)

Do you want to proceed?

Confirm [y/N] y

If the operation was successful, the command will output:

Master node was successfully bootstrapped

Note

This success message indicates that the operation was completed. You may still experience data loss and inconsistencies.

Start the bootstrapped node and verify that it has started a new cluster with one node and elected itself as the master.

Before you can add the rest of the nodes to the new cluster, you must detach them from the old cluster (see the next section).

When that’s done, start the nodes and verify that they join the new cluster.

Note

Once the new cluster is up-and-running and all recoveries are complete, you are responsible for assessing the cluster for data loss and inconsistencies.

Detach a node from its cluster

To protect nodes from inadvertently rejoining the wrong cluster (e.g., in the event of a network partition), each node binds to the first cluster it joins.

However, if a cluster has permanently failed (see the previous section) you must detach nodes before you can move them to a a new cluster.

The crate-node detach-cluster command can help you move a node to a new cluster by resetting the cluster it is bound to (i.e., detaching it from its existing cluster).

Warning

Do not attempt to move a node from one logical cluster to another. You cannot merge two clusters in this fashion.

You should only detach a node subsequent to performing an unsafe cluster bootstrap.

Procedure

To detach a node, run:

sh$ ./bin/crate-node detach-cluster

WARNING: CrateDB MUST be stopped before running this tool.

Do you want to proceed?

Confirm [y/N] y

You should see this:

Node was successfully detached from the cluster.

When the node is started again, it will be able to join a new cluster.

Note

You may also have to update the discovery configuration so that nodes are able to find the new cluster.