Troubleshooting
While Kubernetes and the ArangoDB Kubernetes operator automatically resolve a lot of issues, there are always cases where human attention is needed.
This chapter gives your tips & tricks to help you troubleshoot deployments.
Where to look
In Kubernetes all resources can be inspected using kubectl
using either the get
or describe
command.
To get all details of the resource (both specification & status), run the following command:
kubectl get <resource-type> <resource-name> -n <namespace> -o yaml
For example, to get the entire specification and status of an ArangoDeployment
resource named my-arangodb
in the default
namespace, run:
kubectl get ArangoDeployment my-arango -n default -o yaml
# or shorter
kubectl get arango my-arango -o yaml
Several types of resources (including all ArangoDB custom resources) support events. These events show what happened to the resource over time.
To show the events (and most important resource data) of a resource, run the following command:
kubectl describe <resource-type> <resource-name> -n <namespace>
Getting logs
Another invaluable source of information is the log of containers being run in Kubernetes. These logs are accessible through the Pods
that group these containers.
To fetch the logs of the default container running in a Pod
, run:
kubectl logs <pod-name> -n <namespace>
# or with follow option to keep inspecting logs while they are written
kubectl logs <pod-name> -n <namespace> -f
To inspect the logs of a specific container in Pod
, add -c <container-name>
. You can find the names of the containers in the Pod
, using kubectl describe pod ...
.
What if
The Pods
of a deployment stay in Pending
state
There are two common causes for this.
-
The
Pods
cannot be scheduled because there are not enough nodes available. This is usually only the case with aspec.environment
setting that has a value ofProduction
.Solution: Add more nodes.
-
There are no
PersistentVolumes
available to be bound to thePersistentVolumeClaims
created by the operator.Solution: Use
kubectl get persistentvolumes
to inspect the availablePersistentVolumes
and if needed, use theArangoLocalStorage
operator to provisionPersistentVolumes
.
When restarting a Node
, the Pods
scheduled on that node remain in Terminating
state
When a Node
no longer makes regular calls to the Kubernetes API server, it is marked as not available. Depending on specific settings in your Pods
, Kubernetes will at some point decide to terminate the Pod
. As long as the Node
is not completely removed from the Kubernetes API server, Kubernetes tries to use the Node
itself to terminate the Pod
.
The ArangoDeployment
operator recognizes this condition and tries to replace those Pods
with Pods
on different nodes. The exact behavior differs per type of server.
What happens when a Node
with local data is broken
When a Node
with PersistentVolumes
hosted on that Node
is broken and cannot be repaired, the data in those PersistentVolumes
is lost.
If an ArangoDeployment
of type Single
was using one of those PersistentVolumes
the database is lost and must be restored from a backup.
If an ArangoDeployment
of type ActiveFailover
or Cluster
was using one of those PersistentVolumes
, it depends on the type of server that was using the volume.
- If an
Agent
was using the volume, it can be repaired as long as 2 other Agents are still healthy. - If a
DBServer
was using the volume, and the replication factor of all database collections is 2 or higher, and the remaining DB-Servers are still healthy, the cluster duplicates the remaining replicas to bring the number of replicas back to the original number. - If a
DBServer
was using the volume, and the replication factor of a database collection is 1 and happens to be stored on that DB-Server, the data is lost. - If a single server of an
ActiveFailover
deployment was using the volume, and the other single server is still healthy, the other single server becomes leader. After replacing the failed single server, the new follower synchronizes with the leader.