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Posted to dev@lucene.apache.org by "Andrzej Bialecki (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2017/10/17 17:41:00 UTC
[jira] [Commented] (SOLR-11484) CloudSolrClient's cache of
collection clusterstate can cause RouteExceptions when attempting
directUpdates after collection modifications
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-11484?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16208006#comment-16208006 ]
Andrzej Bialecki commented on SOLR-11484:
------------------------------------------
Effects of this bug may be also combined with effects of SOLR-9440, so fixing the caching at this level may not completely solve the issue.
> CloudSolrClient's cache of collection clusterstate can cause RouteExceptions when attempting directUpdates after collection modifications
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: SOLR-11484
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-11484
> Project: Solr
> Issue Type: Bug
> Security Level: Public(Default Security Level. Issues are Public)
> Reporter: Hoss Man
> Attachments: SOLR-11484.patch, jenkins.thetaphi.20662.txt
>
>
> This was discovered while auditing jenkins failures from
> {{TestCollectionsAPIViaSolrCloudCluster.testCollectionCreateSearchDelete}} (where a test explicitly deletes and then recreates a collection with the same name), but as noted in a comment below, SOLR-11392 is another example of non-obvious test failures that can pop up because of this bug.
> In practice, it can affect any CloudSolrClient user after changes have been made to a collection (to add/move replicas, etc...)
> ----
> Original jira notes...
> {{TestCollectionsAPIViaSolrCloudCluster.testCollectionCreateSearchDelete}}
> seems to fail with non-trivial frequency, so I grabbed the logs from a recent failure and starting trying to follow along with the actions to figure out what exactly is happening....
> https://jenkins.thetaphi.de/job/Lucene-Solr-master-Linux/20662/
> {noformat}
> [junit4] ERROR 20.3s J1 | TestCollectionsAPIViaSolrCloudCluster.testCollectionCreateSearchDelete <<<
> [junit4] > Throwable #1: org.apache.solr.client.solrj.impl.CloudSolrClient$RouteException: Error from server at https://127.0.0.1:42959/solr/testcollection_shard1_replica_n3: Expected mime type a
> pplication/octet-stream but got text/html. <html>
> [junit4] > <head>
> [junit4] > <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1"/>
> [junit4] > <title>Error 404 </title>
> {noformat}
> The crux of this failure appears to be a genuine bug in how CloudSolrClient uses it's cached ClusterState info when doing (direct) updates. The key bits seem to be:
> * CloudSolrClient does _something_ (update,query,etc...) with a collection causing the current cluster state for the collection to be cached
> * The actual collection changes such that a Solr node/core no longer exists as part of the collection
> * CloudSolrClient is asked to process an UpdateRequest which triggers the code paths for the {{directUpdate()}} method -- which attempts to route the updates directly to a replica of the appropriate shard using the (cache) collection state info
> * CloudSolrClient (may) attempt to send that UpdateRequest to a node/core that doesn't exist, getting a 404 -- which does not (seem to) trigger a state refresh, or retry to find a correct URL to resend the update to.
> Details to follow in comment....
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