Performing Rolling Restart

After modifying the configuration items of a big data component, you need to restart the corresponding service to make new configurations take effect. If you use a normal restart mode, all services or instances are restarted concurrently, which may cause service interruption. To ensure that services are not affected during service restart, you can restart services or instances in batches by rolling restart. For instances in active/standby mode, a standby instance is restarted first and then an active instance is restarted. Rolling restart takes longer than normal restart.

Table 1 provides services and instances that support or do not support rolling restart in the MRS cluster.

Table 1 Services and instances that support or do not support rolling restart

Service

Instance

Whether to Support Rolling Restart

HDFS

NameNode

Yes

Zkfc

JournalNode

HttpFS

DataNode

Yarn

ResourceManager

Yes

NodeManager

Hive

MetaStore

Yes

WebHCat

HiveServer

Mapreduce

JobHistoryServer

Yes

HBase

HMaster

Yes

RegionServer

ThriftServer

RESTServer

Spark

JobHistory

Yes

JDBCServer

SparkResource

No

Hue

Hue

No

Tez

TezUI

No

Loader

Sqoop

No

Zookeeper

Quorumpeer

Yes

Kafka

Broker

Yes

MirrorMaker

No

Flume

Flume

Yes

MonitorServer

Storm

Nimbus

Yes

UI

Supervisor

Logviewer

Restrictions

  • Perform a rolling restart during off-peak hours.

    • Otherwise, a rolling restart failure may occur. For example, if the throughput of Kafka is high (over 100 MB/s) during the Kafka rolling restart, the Kafka rolling restart may fail.

    • For example, if the requests per second of each RegionServer on the native interface exceed 10,000 during the HBase rolling restart, you need to increase the number of handles to prevent a RegionServer restart failure caused by heavy loads during the restart.

  • Before the restart, check the number of current requests of HBase. If the number of requests of each RegionServer on the native interface exceeds 10,000, increase the number of handles to prevent a failure.

  • If the number of Core nodes in a cluster is less than six, services may be affected for a short period of time.

  • Preferentially perform a rolling instance or service restart and select Only restart instances whose configurations have expired.

Performing a Rolling Service Restart

  1. Choose Clusters > Active Clusters and click a cluster name to go to the cluster details page.

  2. Click Components and select a service for which you want to perform a rolling restart.

    Note

    For versions earlier than MRS 1.7.2, see Performing a Rolling Service Restart.

  3. On the Service Status tab page, click More and select Rolling-restart Service.

  4. The Rolling-restart Service page is displayed. Select Only restart instances whose configurations have expired and click OK to perform rolling restart for the service.

  5. After the rolling restart task is complete, click Finish.

Performing a Rolling Instance Restart

  1. Choose Clusters > Active Clusters and click a cluster name to go to the cluster details page.

  2. Click Components and select a service for which you want to perform a rolling restart.

    Note

    For versions earlier than MRS 1.7.2, see Performing a Rolling Instance Restart.

  3. On the Instance tab page, select the instance to be restarted. Click More and select Rolling-restart Instance.

  4. After you enter the administrator password, the Rolling-restart Instance page is displayed. Select Only restart instances whose configurations have expired and click OK to perform rolling restart for the instance.

  5. After the rolling restart task is complete, click Finish.

Perform a Rolling Cluster Restart

  1. Choose Clusters > Active Clusters and click a cluster name to go to the cluster details page.

  2. In the upper right corner of the page, choose Management Operations > Perform Rolling Cluster Restart.

    Note

    For versions earlier than MRS 1.7.2, see Perform a Rolling Cluster Restart.

  3. The Rolling-restart Cluster page is displayed. Select Only restart instances whose configurations have expired and click OK to perform rolling restart for the cluster.

  4. After the rolling restart task is complete, click Finish.

Rolling Restart Parameter Description

Table 2 describes rolling restart parameters.

Table 2 Rolling restart parameter description

Parameter

Description

Only restart instances whose configurations have expired

Specifies whether to restart only the modified instances in a cluster.

Data Node Instances to Be Batch Restarted

Specifies the number of instances that are restarted in each batch when the batch rolling restart strategy is used. The default value is 1. The value ranges from 1 to 20. This parameter is valid only for data nodes.

Batch Interval

Specifies the interval between two batches of instances for rolling restart. The default value is 0. The value ranges from 0 to 2147483647. The unit is second.

Note: Setting the batch interval parameter can increase the stability of the big data component process during the rolling restart. You are advised to set this parameter to a non-default value, for example, 10.

Batch Fault Tolerance Threshold

Specifies the tolerance times when the rolling restart of instances fails to be executed in batches. The default value is 0, which indicates that the rolling restart task ends after any batch of instances fails to be restarted. The value ranges from 0 to 2147483647.

Procedure in a Typical Scenario

  1. Choose Clusters > Active Clusters and click a cluster name to go to the cluster details page.

  2. Click Components and select HBase. The HBase service page is displayed.

    Note

    For versions earlier than MRS 1.7.2, see Procedure in a Typical Scenario.

  3. Click the Service Configuration tab, and modify an HBase parameter. After the following dialog box is displayed, click OK to save the configurations.

    Note

    Do not select Restart the affected services or instances. This option indicates a normal restart. If you select this option, all services or instances will be restarted, which may cause service interruption.

  4. After saving the configurations, click Finish.

  5. Click the Service Status tab.

  6. On the Service Status tab page, click More and select Rolling-restart Service.

  7. After you enter the administrator password, the Rolling-restart Service page is displayed. Select Only restart instances whose configurations have expired and click OK to perform rolling restart.

  8. After the rolling restart task is complete, click Finish.