Reputation: 4979
I've created a ubuntu single node hadoop cluster in EC2.
Testing a simple file upload to hdfs works from the EC2 machine, but doesn't work from a machine outside of EC2.
I can browse the the filesystem through the web interface from the remote machine, and it shows one datanode which is reported as in service. Have opened all tcp ports in the security from 0 to 60000(!) so I don't think it's that.
I get the error
java.io.IOException: File /user/ubuntu/pies could only be replicated to 0 nodes, instead of 1
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.namenode.FSNamesystem.getAdditionalBlock(FSNamesystem.java:1448)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.namenode.NameNode.addBlock(NameNode.java:690)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.WritableRpcEngine$Server.call(WritableRpcEngine.java:342)
at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Server$Handler$1.run(Server.java:1350)
at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Server$Handler$1.run(Server.java:1346)
at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
at javax.security.auth.Subject.doAs(Subject.java:396)
at org.apache.hadoop.security.UserGroupInformation.doAs(UserGroupInformation.java:742)
at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Server$Handler.run(Server.java:1344)
at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Client.call(Client.java:905)
at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.WritableRpcEngine$Invoker.invoke(WritableRpcEngine.java:198)
at $Proxy0.addBlock(Unknown Source)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
at org.apache.hadoop.io.retry.RetryInvocationHandler.invokeMethod(RetryInvocationHandler.java:82)
at org.apache.hadoop.io.retry.RetryInvocationHandler.invoke(RetryInvocationHandler.java:59)
at $Proxy0.addBlock(Unknown Source)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.locateFollowingBlock(DFSOutputStream.java:928)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.nextBlockOutputStream(DFSOutputStream.java:811)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.run(DFSOutputStream.java:427)
namenode log just gives the same error. Others don't seem to have anything interesting
Any ideas?
Cheers
Upvotes: 70
Views: 92509
Reputation: 13835
Follow the below steps:
1. Stop dfs
and yarn
.
2. Remove datanode and namenode directories as specified in the core-site.xml
.
3. Start dfs
and yarn
as follows:
start-dfs.sh
start-yarn.sh
mr-jobhistory-daemon.sh start historyserver
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1590
WARNING: The following will destroy ALL data on HDFS. Do not execute the steps in this answer unless you do not care about destroying existing data!!
You should do this:
hdfs namenode -format
Answer with a capital YAlso, check the diskspace in your system and make sure the logs are not warning you about it.
Upvotes: 76
Reputation: 2532
It take me a week to figure out the problem in my situation.
When the client(your program) ask the nameNode for data operation, the nameNode picks up a dataNode and navigate the client to it, by giving the dataNode's ip to the client.
But, when the dataNode host is configured to has multiple ip, and the nameNode gives you the one your client CAN'T ACCESS TO, the client would add the dataNode to exclude list and ask the nameNode for a new one, and finally all dataNode are excluded, you get this error.
So check node's ip settings before you try everything!!!
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1
Don't format the name node immediately. Try stop-all.sh and start it using start-all.sh. If the problem persists, go for formatting the name node.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 11337
I'll try to describe my setup & solution: My setup: RHEL 7, hadoop-2.7.3
I tried to setup standalone Operation first and then Pseudo-Distributed Operation where the latter failed with the same issue.
Although, when I start hadoop with:
sbin/start-dfs.sh
I got the following:
Starting namenodes on [localhost]
localhost: starting namenode, logging to /home/<user>/hadoop-2.7.3/logs/hadoop-<user>-namenode-localhost.localdomain.out
localhost: starting datanode, logging to /home/<user>/hadoop-2.7.3/logs/hadoop-<user>-datanode-localhost.localdomain.out
Starting secondary namenodes [0.0.0.0]
0.0.0.0: starting secondarynamenode, logging to /home/<user>/hadoop-2.7.3/logs/hadoop-<user>-secondarynamenode-localhost.localdomain.out
which looks promising (starting datanode.. with no failures) - but the datanode wasn't exist indeed.
Another indication was to see that there is no datanode in operation (the below snapshot shows fixed working state):
I've fix that issue by doing:
rm -rf /tmp/hadoop-<user>/dfs/name
rm -rf /tmp/hadoop-<user>/dfs/data
and then start again:
sbin/start-dfs.sh
...
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 920
If all data nodes are running, one more thing to check whether the HDFS has enough space for your data. I can upload a small file but failed to upload a big file (30GB) to HDFS. 'bin/hdfs dfsadmin -report' shows that each data node only has a few GB available.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 621
This is your issue - the client can't communicate with the Datanode. Because the IP that the client received for the Datanode is an internal IP and not the public IP. Take a look at this
http://www.hadoopinrealworld.com/could-only-be-replicated-to-0-nodes/
Look at the sourcecode from DFSClient$DFSOutputStrem (Hadoop 1.2.1)
//
// Connect to first DataNode in the list.
//
success = createBlockOutputStream(nodes, clientName, false);
if (!success) {
LOG.info("Abandoning " + block);
namenode.abandonBlock(block, src, clientName);
if (errorIndex < nodes.length) {
LOG.info("Excluding datanode " + nodes[errorIndex]);
excludedNodes.add(nodes[errorIndex]);
}
// Connection failed. Let's wait a little bit and retry
retry = true;
}
The key to understand here is that Namenode only provide the list of Datanodes to store the blocks. Namenode does not write the data to the Datanodes. It is the job of the Client to write the data to the Datanodes using the DFSOutputStream . Before any write can begin the above code make sure that the Client can communicate with the Datanode(s) and if the communication fails to the Datanode, the Datanode is added to the excludedNodes .
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 91
Look at following:
By seeing this exception(could only be replicated to 0 nodes, instead of 1), datanode is not available to Name Node..
This are the following cases Data Node may not available to Name Node
Data Node disk is Full
Data Node is Busy with block report and block scanning
If Block Size is Negative value(dfs.block.size in hdfs-site.xml)
while write in progress primary datanode goes down(Any n/w fluctations b/w Name Node and Data Node Machines)
when Ever we append any partial chunk and call sync for subsequent partial chunk appends client should store the previous data in buffer.
For example after appending "a" I have called sync and when I am trying the to append the buffer should have "ab"
And Server side when the chunk is not multiple of 512 then it will try to do Crc comparison for the data present in block file as well as crc present in metafile. But while constructing crc for the data present in block it is always comparing till the initial Offeset Or For more analysis Please the data node logs
Reference: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg01374.html
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 367
I had the same error on MacOS X 10.7 (hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0) due to data node not starting.
start-all.sh
produced following output:
starting namenode, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
localhost: ssh: connect to host localhost port 22: Connection refused
localhost: ssh: connect to host localhost port 22: Connection refused
starting jobtracker, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
localhost: ssh: connect to host localhost port 22: Connection refused
After enabling ssh login via System Preferences -> Sharing -> Remote Login
it started to work.
start-all.sh
output changed to following (note start of datanode):
starting namenode, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
Password:
localhost: starting datanode, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
Password:
localhost: starting secondarynamenode, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
starting jobtracker, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
Password:
localhost: starting tasktracker, logging to /java/hadoop-0.20.2-cdh3u0/logs/...
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3307
I realize I'm a little late to the party, but I wanted to post this for future visitors of this page. I was having a very similar problem when I was copying files from local to hdfs and reformatting the namenode did not fix the problem for me. It turned out that my namenode logs had the following error message:
2012-07-11 03:55:43,479 ERROR org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.DataNode: DatanodeRegistration(127.0.0.1:50010, storageID=DS-920118459-192.168.3.229-50010-1341506209533, infoPort=50075, ipcPort=50020):DataXceiver java.io.IOException: Too many open files
at java.io.UnixFileSystem.createFileExclusively(Native Method)
at java.io.File.createNewFile(File.java:883)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.FSDataset$FSVolume.createTmpFile(FSDataset.java:491)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.FSDataset$FSVolume.createTmpFile(FSDataset.java:462)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.FSDataset.createTmpFile(FSDataset.java:1628)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.FSDataset.writeToBlock(FSDataset.java:1514)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.BlockReceiver.<init>(BlockReceiver.java:113)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.DataXceiver.writeBlock(DataXceiver.java:381)
at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.server.datanode.DataXceiver.run(DataXceiver.java:171)
Apparently, this is a relatively common problem on hadoop clusters and Cloudera suggests increasing the nofile and epoll limits (if on kernel 2.6.27) to work around it. The tricky thing is that setting nofile and epoll limits is highly system dependent. My Ubuntu 10.04 server required a slightly different configuration for this to work properly, so you may need to alter your approach accordingly.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21
And I think you should make sure all the datanodes are up when you do copy to dfs. In some case, it takes a while. I think that's why the solution 'checking the health status' works, because you go to the health status webpage and wait for everything up, my five cents.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1697
I had a similar problem setting up a single node cluster. I realized that I didn't config any datanode. I added my hostname to conf/slaves, then it worked out. Hope it helps.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 444
Reformatting the node is not the solution. You will have to edit the start-all.sh. Start the dfs, wait for it to start completely and then start mapred. You can do this using a sleep. Waiting for 1 second worked for me. See the complete solution here http://sonalgoyal.blogspot.com/2009/06/hadoop-on-ubuntu.html.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1275
Have you tried the recommend from the wiki http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/HowToSetupYourDevelopmentEnvironment ?
I was getting this error when putting data into the dfs. The solution is strange and probably inconsistent: I erased all temporary data along with the namenode, reformatted the namenode, started everything up, and visited my "cluster's" dfs health page (http://your_host:50070/dfshealth.jsp). The last step, visiting the health page, is the only way I can get around the error. Once I've visited the page, putting and getting files in and out of the dfs works great!
Upvotes: 0