Help Center/ MapReduce Service/ Component Operation Guide (LTS) (Ankara Region)/ Using YARN/ Common Issues About Yarn/ Why May A Single NodeManager Fault Cause MapReduce Task Failures in the Superior Scheduling Mode?
Updated on 2024-11-29 GMT+08:00

Why May A Single NodeManager Fault Cause MapReduce Task Failures in the Superior Scheduling Mode?

Question

In Superior scheduling mode, if a single NodeManager is faulty, why may the MapReduce tasks fail?

Answer

In normal cases, when the attempt of a single task of an application fails on a node for three consecutive times, the AppMaster of the application adds the node to the blacklist. Then, the AppMaster instructs the scheduler not to schedule the task to the node to avoid task failure.

However, by default, if 33% nodes in the cluster are added to the blacklist, the scheduler ignores the blacklisted nodes. Therefore, the blacklist feature is prone to become invalid in small cluster scenarios. For example, there are only three nodes in the cluster. If one node is faulty, the blacklist mechanism becomes invalid. The scheduler continues to schedule the task to the node no matter how many times the attempt of the task fails on the node. As a result, the number of attempts of the task reaches the maximum (4 times by default for MapReduce). And the MapReduce tasks failed.

Workaround:

In the Client installation path/Yarn/config/yarn-site.xml file, modify the yarn.resourcemanager.am-scheduling.node-blacklisting-disable-threshold parameter to configure the threshold (in percentage) for ignoring blacklisted nodes. You are advised to increase the value of this parameter based on the cluster scale. For example, you are advised to set this parameter to 50% for a three-node cluster.

The framework design of the Superior scheduler is time-based asynchronous scheduling. When the NodeManager is faulty, ResourceManager cannot quickly detect that the NodeManager is faulty (10 minutes by default). Therefore, the Superior scheduler still schedules tasks to the node, causing task failures.