Journal Management
Alluxio is fault-tolerant: force-killing the system will not lose metadata. To achieve this, the master writes edit logs of all metadata changes. On startup, a recovering master will read the edit logs to restore itself back to its previous state. We use the term “journal” to refer to the system of edit logs used to support fault-tolerance. The purpose of this documentation is to help Alluxio administrators understand and manage the Alluxio journal.
Configuration
The most important configuration value to set for the journal is alluxio.master.journal.folder
. This must be set to a filesystem folder that is available to all masters. In single-master mode, a local filesystem path may be used for simplicity. With multiple masters distributed across different machines, the folder must be in a distributed system where all masters can access it. The journal folder should be in a filesystem that supports flush such as HDFS or NFS. It is not recommended to put the journal in an object store like S3. With an object store, every metadata operation requires a new object to be created, which is prohibitively slow for most serious use cases.
Configuration examples:
Use HDFS to store the journal:
alluxio.master.journal.folder=hdfs://[namenodeserver]:[namenodeport]/alluxio_journal
Use the local file system to store the journal:
alluxio.master.journal.folder=/opt/alluxio/journal
Formatting the journal
Formatting the journal deletes all of its content and restores it to a fresh state. Before starting Alluxio for the first time, the journal must be formatted.
# This permanently deletes all Alluxio metadata, so be careful with this operation
bin/alluxio formatMaster
Operations
Manually backing up the journal
Alluxio supports taking journal backups so that Alluxio metadata can be restored to a previous point in time. Generating a backup causes temporary service unavailability while the backup is written.
To generate a backup, use the fsadmin backup
CLI command.
bin/alluxio fsadmin backup
By default, this will write a backup named alluxio-journal-YYYY-MM-DD-timestamp.gz
to the “/alluxio_backups” directory of the root under storage system, e.g. hdfs://cluster/alluxio_backups. This default backup directory can be configured by setting alluxio.master.backup.directory
alluxio.master.backup.directory=/alluxio/backups
See the backup command documentation for additional backup options.
Automatically backing up the journal
Alluxio supports automatically taking primary master metadata snapshots every day at a fixed time so that Alluxio metadata can be restored to at most one day before. This functionality is enabled by setting the following property in ${ALLUXIO_HOME}/conf/alluxio-site.properties
:
alluxio.master.daily.backup.enabled=true
The time to take daily snapshots is defined by alluxio.master.daily.backup.time
. For example, if a user specified alluxio.master.daily.backup.time=05:30
, the Alluxio primary master will back up its metadata to the alluxio.master.backup.directory
of the root UFS every day at 5:30am UTC. We recommend setting the backup time to an off-peak time to avoid interfering with other users of the system.
In the daily backup, the backup directory needs to be an absolute path within the root UFS. For example, if alluxio.master.backup.directory=/alluxio_backups
and alluxio.master.mount.table.root.ufs=hdfs://192.168.1.1:9000/alluxio/underfs
, the default backup directory would be hdfs://192.168.1.1:9000/alluxio_backups
.
The files to retain in the backup directory is limited by alluxio.master.daily.backup.files.retained
. Users can set this property to the number of backup files they want to keep in the backup directory.
Restoring from a backup
To restore the Alluxio system from a journal backup, stop the system, format the journal, then restart the system, passing the URI of the backup with the -i
(import) flag.
bin/alluxio-stop.sh masters
bin/alluxio formatMaster
bin/alluxio-start.sh -i <backup_uri> masters
The <backup_uri>
should be a full URI path that is available to all masters, e.g. hdfs://[namenodeserver]:[namenodeport]/alluxio_backups/alluxio-journal-YYYY-MM-DD-timestamp.gz
If starting up masters individually, pass the -i
argument to each one. The master which becomes leader first will import the journal backup, and the rest will ignore the -i
.
If the restore succeeds, you should see a log message along the lines of
INFO AlluxioMasterProcess - Restored 57 entries from backup
in the leading master logs.
Changing masters
If the journal is stored in a shared storage system like HDFS, changing masters is easy. As long as the new master sets alluxio.master.journal.folder
the same as the old master, it will start up in the same state that the old master left off.
If the journal is stored on the local filesystem, the journal folder needs to be copied to the new master.
Advanced
Managing the journal size
When running with a single master, the journal folder size will grow indefinitely as metadata operations are written to journal log files. To address this, production deployments should run in HA mode with multiple Alluxio masters. The standby masters will create checkpoints of the master state and clean up the logs that were written prior to the checkpoints. For example, if 3 million Alluxio files were created and then 2 million were deleted, the journal logs would contain 5 million total entries. Then if a checkpoint is taken, the checkpoint will contain only the metadata for the 1 million remaining files, and the original 5 million entries will be deleted.
By default, checkpoints are automatically taken every 2 million entries. This can be configured by setting alluxio.master.journal.checkpoint.period.entries
on the masters. Setting the value lower will reduce the amount of disk space needed by the journal at the cost of additional work for the standby masters.
If HA mode is not an option, it is possible to run a master on the same node as a dedicated standby master. This second master exists only to write checkpoints, and will not serve client requests if the leading master dies. In this setup, both masters have similar memory requirements since they both need to hold all Alluxio metadata in memory. To start a dedicated standby master for writing periodic checkpoints, run
bin/alluxio-start.sh secondary_master
Recovering from journal issues
The journal is integral to Alluxio’s health. If the filesystem storing the journal loses availability, no metadata operations can be performed on Alluxio. Similarly, if the journal is accidentally deleted or its storage system becomes corrupted, Alluxio must be reformatted to recover. To avoid the need for full reformatting, we recommend taking regular journal backups at a time when the cluster is under low load. Then if something happens to the journal, you can recover from one of the backups.