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Posted to issues@cloudstack.apache.org by "Chip Childers (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2013/06/04 20:55:51 UTC

[jira] [Updated] (CLOUDSTACK-105) /tmp/stream-unix.####.###### stale sockets causing inodes to run out on Xenserver

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CLOUDSTACK-105?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Chip Childers updated CLOUDSTACK-105:
-------------------------------------

    Fix Version/s:     (was: 4.1.0)
                   4.2.0
    
> /tmp/stream-unix.####.###### stale sockets causing inodes to run out on Xenserver
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CLOUDSTACK-105
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CLOUDSTACK-105
>             Project: CloudStack
>          Issue Type: Bug
>      Security Level: Public(Anyone can view this level - this is the default.) 
>          Components: Third-Party Bugs
>    Affects Versions: pre-4.0.0
>         Environment: Xenserver 6.0.2
> Cloudstack 3.0.2
>            Reporter: Caleb Call
>            Assignee: Devdeep Singh
>             Fix For: 4.2.0
>
>         Attachments: messages
>
>
> We came across an interesting issue in one of our clusters.  We ran out of inodes on all of our cluster members (since when does this happen in 2012?).  When this happened, it in turn made the / filesystem a read-only filesystem which in turn made all the hosts go in to emergency maintenance mode and as a result get marked down by Cloudstack.  We found that it was caused by hundreds of thousands of stale socket files in /tmp named "stream-unix.####.######".  To resolve the issue, we had to delete those stale socket files (find /tmp -name "*stream*" -mtime +7 -exec rm -v {} \;), then kill and restart xapi, then correct the emergency maintenance mode.  These hosts had only been up for 45 days before this issue occurred.  
> In our scouring of the interwebs, the only other instance we've been able to find of this (or similar) happening is in the same setup we are currently running. Xenserver 6.0.2 with CS 3.0.2.  Do these stream-unix sockets have anything to do with Cloudstack?  I would think if this was a Xenserver issue (bug), there would be a lot more on the internet about this happening.  For a temporary workaround, we've added a cronjob to cleanup these files but we'd really like to address the actual issue that's causing these sockets to become stale and not get cleaned-up.

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