← Back to team overview

yahoo-eng-team team mailing list archive

[Bug 1270608] Re: n-cpu 'iSCSI device not found' log causes gate-tempest-dsvm-*-full to fail

 

** Changed in: cinder
       Status: Fix Committed => Fix Released

** Changed in: cinder
    Milestone: None => icehouse-3

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Yahoo!
Engineering Team, which is subscribed to OpenStack Compute (nova).
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1270608

Title:
  n-cpu 'iSCSI device not found' log causes gate-tempest-dsvm-*-full to
  fail

Status in Cinder:
  Fix Released
Status in OpenStack Compute (Nova):
  Fix Released

Bug description:
  Changes are failing the gate-tempest-*-full gate due to an error message in the logs.
  The error message is like

  2014-01-18 20:13:19.437 | Log File: n-cpu
  2014-01-18 20:13:20.482 | 2014-01-18 20:04:05.189 ERROR nova.compute.manager [req-25a1842c-ce9a-4035-8975-651f6ee5ddfc tempest.scenario.manager-tempest-1060379467-user tempest.scenario.manager-tempest-1060379467-tenant] [instance: 0b1c1b55-b520-4ff2-bac2-8457ba3f4b6a] Error: iSCSI device not found at /dev/disk/by-path/ip-127.0.0.1:3260-iscsi-iqn.2010-10.org.openstack:volume-a6e86002-dc25-4782-943b-58cc0c68238d-lun-1

  Here's logstash for the query:

  http://logstash.openstack.org/#eyJzZWFyY2giOiJmaWxlbmFtZTpcImxvZ3Mvc2NyZWVuLW4tY3B1LnR4dFwiIEFORCBtZXNzYWdlOlwiRXJyb3I6IGlTQ1NJIGRldmljZSBub3QgZm91bmQgYXQgL2Rldi9kaXNrL2J5LXBhdGgvaXAtMTI3LjAuMC4xOjMyNjAtaXNjc2ktaXFuLjIwMTAtMTAub3JnLm9wZW5zdGFjazp2b2x1bWUtXCIiLCJmaWVsZHMiOltdLCJvZmZzZXQiOjAsInRpbWVmcmFtZSI6IjYwNDgwMCIsImdyYXBobW9kZSI6ImNvdW50IiwidGltZSI6eyJ1c2VyX2ludGVydmFsIjowfSwic3RhbXAiOjEzOTAxNTA4NTU5NTJ9

  shows several failures starting at 2014-01-17T14:00:00

  Maybe tempest is doing something that generates the ERROR message and then isn't accepting the error message it should?
  Or nova is logging an error message when it shouldn't?

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/cinder/+bug/1270608/+subscriptions


References