The following document explains the usage of volume heal info and split-brain resolution commands. ##`gluster volume heal info [split-brain]` commands ###volume heal info Usage: `gluster volume heal info` This lists all the files that need healing (either their path or GFID is printed). ###Interpretting the output All the files that are listed in the output of this command need healing to be done. Apart from this, there are 2 special cases that may be associated with an entry - a) Is in split-brain        A file in data/metadata split-brain will be listed with " - Is in split-brain" appended after its path/gfid. Eg., "/file4" in the output provided below. But for a gfid split-brain, the parent directory of the file is shown to be in split-brain and the file itself is shown to be needing heal. Eg., "/dir" in the output provided below which is in split-brain because of gfid split-brain of file "/dir/a". b) Is possibly undergoing heal        A file is said to be possibly undergoing heal because it is possible that the file was undergoing heal when heal status was being determined but it cannot be said for sure. It could so have happened that self-heal daemon and glfsheal process that is trying to get heal information are competing for the same lock leading to such conclusion. Another possible case could be multiple glfsheal processes running simultaneously (e.g., multiple users ran heal info command at the same time), competing for same lock. The following is an example of heal info command's output. ###Example Consider a replica volume "test" with 2 bricks b1 and b2; self-heal daemon off, mounted at /mnt. `gluster volume heal test info` ~~~ Brick \ - Is in split-brain - Is in split-brain - Is in split-brain Number of entries: 4 Brick /dir/file2 /dir/file1 - Is in split-brain /dir - Is in split-brain /dir/file3 /file4 - Is in split-brain /dir/a Number of entries: 6 ~~~ ###Analysis of the output It can be seen that A) from brick b1 4 entries need healing:       1) file with gfid:6dc78b20-7eb6-49a3-8edb-087b90142246 needs healing       2) "aaca219f-0e25-4576-8689-3bfd93ca70c2", "39f301ae-4038-48c2-a889-7dac143e82dd" and "c3c94de2-232d-4083-b534-5da17fc476ac" are in split-brain B) from brick b2 6 entries need healing-       1) "a", "file2" and "file3" need healing       2) "file1", "file4" & "/dir" are in split-brain ###volume heal info split-brain Usage: `gluster volume heal info split-brain` This command shows all the files that are in split-brain. ##Example `gluster volume heal test info split-brain` ~~~ Brick Number of entries in split-brain: 3 Brick /dir/file1 /dir /file4 Number of entries in split-brain: 3 ~~~ Note that, similar to heal info command, for gfid split-brains (same filename but different gfid) their parent directories are listed to be in split-brain. ##Resolution of split-brain using CLI Once the files in split-brain are identified, their resolution can be done from the command line. Note that entry/gfid split-brain resolution is not supported. Split-brain resolution commands let the user resolve split-brain in 3 ways. ###Select the bigger-file as source This command is useful for per file healing where it is known/decided that the file with bigger size is to be considered as source. 1.`gluster volume heal split-brain bigger-file ` `` can be either the full file name as seen from the root of the volume (or) the gfid-string representation of the file, which sometimes gets displayed in the heal info command's output. Once this command is executed, the replica containing the FILE with bigger size is found out and heal is completed with it as source. ###Example : Consider the above output of heal info split-brain command. Before healing the file, notice file size and md5 checksums : ~~~ On brick b1: # stat b1/dir/file1 File: ‘b1/dir/file1’ Size: 17 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919362 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 13:55:40.149897333 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:55:37.206880347 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 13:55:37.206880347 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b1/dir/file1 040751929ceabf77c3c0b3b662f341a8 b1/dir/file1 On brick b2: # stat b2/dir/file1 File: ‘b2/dir/file1’ Size: 13 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919365 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 13:54:22.974451898 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:52:22.910758923 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 13:52:22.910758923 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b2/dir/file1 cb11635a45d45668a403145059c2a0d5 b2/dir/file1 ~~~ Healing file1 using the above command - `gluster volume heal test split-brain bigger-file /dir/file1` Healed /dir/file1. After healing is complete, the md5sum and file size on both bricks should be the same. ~~~ On brick b1: # stat b1/dir/file1 File: ‘b1/dir/file1’ Size: 17 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919362 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 14:17:27.752429505 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:55:37.206880347 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 14:17:12.880343950 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b1/dir/file1 040751929ceabf77c3c0b3b662f341a8 b1/dir/file1 On brick b2: # stat b2/dir/file1 File: ‘b2/dir/file1’ Size: 17 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919365 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 14:17:23.249403600 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:55:37.206880000 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 14:17:12.881343955 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b2/dir/file1 040751929ceabf77c3c0b3b662f341a8 b2/dir/file1 ~~~ ###Select one replica as source for a particular file 2.`gluster volume heal split-brain source-brick ` `` is selected as source brick, FILE present in the source brick is taken as source for healing. ###Example : Notice the md5 checksums and file size before and after heal. Before heal : ~~~ On brick b1: stat b1/file4 File: ‘b1/file4’ Size: 4 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919356 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 13:53:19.417085062 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:53:19.426085114 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 13:53:19.426085114 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b1/file4 b6273b589df2dfdbd8fe35b1011e3183 b1/file4 On brick b2: # stat b2/file4 File: ‘b2/file4’ Size: 4 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919358 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 13:52:35.761833096 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:52:35.769833142 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 13:52:35.769833142 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b2/file4 0bee89b07a248e27c83fc3d5951213c1 b2/file4 ~~~ `gluster volume heal test split-brain source-brick test-host:/test/b1 gfid:c3c94de2-232d-4083-b534-5da17fc476ac` Healed gfid:c3c94de2-232d-4083-b534-5da17fc476ac. After healing : ~~~ On brick b1: # stat b1/file4 File: ‘b1/file4’ Size: 4 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919356 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 14:23:38.944609863 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:53:19.426085114 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 14:27:15.058927962 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b1/file4 b6273b589df2dfdbd8fe35b1011e3183 b1/file4 On brick b2: # stat b2/file4 File: ‘b2/file4’ Size: 4 Blocks: 16 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: fd03h/64771d Inode: 919358 Links: 2 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 0/ root) Gid: ( 0/ root) Access: 2015-03-06 14:23:38.944609000 +0530 Modify: 2015-03-06 13:53:19.426085000 +0530 Change: 2015-03-06 14:27:15.059927968 +0530 Birth: - # md5sum b2/file4 b6273b589df2dfdbd8fe35b1011e3183 b2/file4 ~~~ Note that, as mentioned earlier, entry split-brain and gfid split-brain healing are not supported using CLI. However, they can be fixed using the method described [here](https://github.com/gluster/glusterfs/blob/master/doc/debugging/split-brain.md). ###Example: Trying to heal /dir would fail as it is in entry split-brain. `gluster volume heal test split-brain source-brick test-host:/test/b1 /dir` Healing /dir failed:Operation not permitted. Volume heal failed. 3.`gluster volume heal split-brain source-brick ` Consider a scenario where many files are in split-brain such that one brick of replica pair is source. As the result of the above command all split-brained files in `` are selected as source and healed to the sink. ###Example: Consider a volume having three entries "a, b and c" in split-brain. ~~~ `gluster volume heal test split-brain source-brick test-host:/test/b1` Healed gfid:944b4764-c253-4f02-b35f-0d0ae2f86c0f. Healed gfid:3256d814-961c-4e6e-8df2-3a3143269ced. Healed gfid:b23dd8de-af03-4006-a803-96d8bc0df004. Number of healed entries: 3 ~~~ ## An overview of working of heal info commands When these commands are invoked, a "glfsheal" process is spawned which reads the entries from `//.glusterfs/indices/xattrop/` directory of all the bricks that are up (that it can connect to) one after another. These entries are GFIDs of files that might need healing. Once GFID entries from a brick are obtained, based on the lookup response of this file on each participating brick of replica-pair & trusted.afr.* extended attributes it is found out if the file needs healing, is in split-brain etc based on the requirement of each command and displayed to the user. ##Resolution of split-brain from the mount point A set of getfattr and setfattr commands have been provided to detect the data and metadata split-brain status of a file and resolve split-brain, if any, from mount point. Consider a volume "test", having bricks b0, b1, b2 and b3. ~~~ # gluster volume info test Volume Name: test Type: Distributed-Replicate Volume ID: 00161935-de9e-4b80-a643-b36693183b61 Status: Started Number of Bricks: 2 x 2 = 4 Transport-type: tcp Bricks: Brick1: test-host:/test/b0 Brick2: test-host:/test/b1 Brick3: test-host:/test/b2 Brick4: test-host:/test/b3 ~~~ Directory structure of the bricks is as follows: ~~~ # tree -R /test/b? /test/b0 ├── dir │   └── a └── file100 /test/b1 ├── dir │   └── a └── file100 /test/b2 ├── dir ├── file1 ├── file2 └── file99 /test/b3 ├── dir ├── file1 ├── file2 └── file99 ~~~ Some files in the volume are in split-brain. ~~~ # gluster v heal test info split-brain Brick test-host:/test/b0/ /file100 /dir Number of entries in split-brain: 2 Brick test-host:/test/b1/ /file100 /dir Number of entries in split-brain: 2 Brick test-host:/test/b2/ /file99 Number of entries in split-brain: 2 Brick test-host:/test/b3/ Number of entries in split-brain: 2 ~~~ ###To know data/metadata split-brain status of a file: ~~~ getfattr -n replica.split-brain-status ~~~ The above command executed from mount provides information if a file is in data/metadata split-brain. Also provides the list of afr children to analyze to get more information about the file. This command is not applicable to gfid/directory split-brain. ###Example: 1) "file100" is in metadata split-brain. Executing the above mentioned command for file100 gives : ~~~ # getfattr -n replica.split-brain-status file100 # file: file100 replica.split-brain-status="data-split-brain:no metadata-split-brain:yes Choices:test-client-0,test-client-1" ~~~ 2) "file1" is in data split-brain. ~~~ # getfattr -n replica.split-brain-status file1 # file: file1 replica.split-brain-status="data-split-brain:yes metadata-split-brain:no Choices:test-client-2,test-client-3" ~~~ 3) "file99" is in both data and metadata split-brain. ~~~ # getfattr -n replica.split-brain-status file99 # file: file99 replica.split-brain-status="data-split-brain:yes metadata-split-brain:yes Choices:test-client-2,test-client-3" ~~~ 4) "dir" is in directory split-brain but as mentioned earlier, the above command is not applicable to such split-brain. So it says that the file is not under data or metadata split-brain. ~~~ # getfattr -n replica.split-brain-status dir # file: dir replica.split-brain-status="The file is not under data or metadata split-brain" ~~~ 5) "file2" is not in any kind of split-brain. ~~~ # getfattr -n replica.split-brain-status file2 # file: file2 replica.split-brain-status="The file is not under data or metadata split-brain" ~~~ ### To analyze the files in data and metadata split-brain Trying to do operations (say cat, getfattr etc) from the mount on files in split-brain, gives an input/output error. To enable the users analyze such files, a setfattr command is provided. ~~~ # setfattr -n replica.split-brain-choice -v "choiceX" ~~~ Using this command, a particular brick can be chosen to access the file in split-brain from. ###Example: 1) "file1" is in data-split-brain. Trying to read from the file gives input/output error. ~~~ # cat file1 cat: file1: Input/output error ~~~ Split-brain choices provided for file1 were test-client-2 and test-client-3. Setting test-client-2 as split-brain choice for file1 serves reads from b2 for the file. ~~~ # setfattr -n replica.split-brain-choice -v test-client-2 file1 ~~~ Now, read operations on the file can be done. ~~~ # cat file1 xyz ~~~ Similarly, to inspect the file from other choice, replica.split-brain-choice is to be set to test-client-3. Trying to inspect the file from a wrong choice errors out. To undo the split-brain-choice that has been set, the above mentioned setfattr command can be used with "none" as the value for extended attribute. ###Example: ~~~ 1) setfattr -n replica.split-brain-choice -v none file1 ~~~ Now performing cat operation on the file will again result in input/output error, as before. ~~~ # cat file cat: file1: Input/output error ~~~ The user can access each file for a timeout amount of period every time replica.split-brain-choice is set. This timeout is configurable by user, with a default value of 5 minutes. ### To set split-brain-choice timeout A setfattr command from the mount allows the user set this timeout, to be specified in minutes. ~~~ # setfattr -n replica.split-brain-choice-timeout -v ~~~ This is a global timeout, i.e. applicable to all files as long as the mount exists. So, the timeout need not be set each time a file needs to be inspected but for a new mount it will have to be set again for the first time. This option also needs to be set every time there is a client graph switch (_See note #3_). ### Resolving the split-brain Once the choice for resolving split-brain is made, source brick is supposed to be set for the healing to be done. This is done using the following command: ~~~ # setfattr -n replica.split-brain-heal-finalize -v ~~~ ##Example ~~~ # setfattr -n replica.split-brain-heal-finalize -v test-client-2 file1 ~~~ The above process can be used to resolve data and/or metadata split-brain on all the files. NOTE: 1) If "fopen-keep-cache" fuse mount option is disabled then inode needs to be invalidated each time before selecting a new replica.split-brain-choice to inspect a file. This can be done by using: ~~~ # sefattr -n inode-invalidate -v 0 ~~~ 2) The above mentioned process for split-brain resolution from mount will not work on nfs mounts as it doesn't provide xattrs support. 3) Client graph switch occurs when there is a change in the client side translator graph; typically during addition of new translators to the graph on client side and add-brick/remove-brick operations.