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Earlier, both chagelog on/off and brick restart were considered
to be changelog breakage and treated as changelog not being
continuous. As a result, new HTIME.TSTAMP file was created on
both the above cases. Now the change is made such that only
on changelog enable/disable, the changelog is considered to be
discontinuous. New HTIME.TSTAMP file is not created on brick
restart, the changelogs files are appended to last HTIME.TSTAMP
file.
Treating changelog as continuous in above scenario is important
as changelog history API will fail otherwise. It can successfully
get changes between start and end timestamps only when changelog
is continuous (Changelogs in single HTIME.TSTAMP file are treated
as continuous). Without this change, changelog history API would
fail, and it would become necessary to fallback to other mechanisms
like xsync FSCrawl in case geo-rep to detect changes in this time
window. But Xsync FSCrawl would not be applicable to other
consumers like glusterfind.
Rationale:
1. In plain distributed volume, if brick goes down, no I/O can
happen onto the brick. Hence changelog is intact with data
on disk.
2. In distributed replicate volume, if brick goes down, since
self-heal traffic is captured in changelog. Eventually,
I/O happened whend brick down is captured in changelog.
Change-Id: I2eb66efe6ee9a9228fb1fcb38d6e7696b9559d5b
BUG: 1211327
Signed-off-by: Kotresh HR <khiremat@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/10222
Reviewed-by: Venky Shankar <vshankar@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Venky Shankar <vshankar@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Gluster Build System <jenkins@build.gluster.com>
Tested-by: NetBSD Build System
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