A couple of weeks ago one of my colleagues and I worked on a data corruption case that reminded me that sometimes people make unsafe assumptions without knowing it. This one involved SAN snapshotting that was unsafe.

In a nutshell, the client used SAN block-level replication to maintain a standby/failover MySQL system, and there was a failover that didn’t work; both the primary and fallback machine had identically corrupted data files. After running fsck on the replica, the InnoDB data files were entirely deleted.

When we arrived on the scene, there was a data directory with an 800+ GB data file, which we determined had been restored from a SAN snapshot. Accessing this file caused a number of errors, including warnings about accessing data outside of the partition boundaries. We were eventually able to coax the filesystem into truncating the data file back to a size that didn’t contain invalid pointers and could be read without errors on the filesystem level. From InnoDB’s point of view, though, it was still completely corrupted. The “InnoDB file” contained blocks of data that were obviously from other files, such as Python exception logs. The SAN snapshot was useless for practical purposes. (The client decided not to try to extract the data from the corrupted file, which we have specialized tools for doing. It’s an intensive process that costs a little money.)

The problem was that the filesystem was ext2, with no journaling and no consistency guarantees. A snapshot on the SAN is just the same as cutting the power to the machine — the block device is in an inconsistent state. A filesystem that can survive that has to ensure that it writes the data to the block device such that it can bring into a consistent state later. The techniques for doing this include things like ordered writes and meta-data journaling. But ext2 does not know how to do that. The data that’s seen by the SAN is some jumble of blocks that represents the most efficient way to transfer the changed blocks over the interconnect, without regard to logical consistency on the filesystem level.

Two things can help avoid such a disaster: 1) get qualified advice and 2) don’t trust the advice; backups and disaster recovery plans must be tested periodically.

This case illustrates an important point that I repeat often. The danger of using a replica as a backup is that data loss on the primary can affect the replica, too. This is true no matter what type of replication is being used. In this case it’s block-level SAN replication. DRBD would behave just the same way. At a higher level, MySQL replication has the same weakness. If you rely on a MySQL slave for a “backup,” you’ll be out of luck when someone accidentally runs DROP TABLE on your master. That statement will promptly replicate over and drop the table off your “backup.”

I still see people using a replica as a backup, and I know it’s just a matter of time before they lose data. In my experience, the types of errors that will propagate through replication are much more common than those that’ll be isolated to just one machine, such as hardware failures.