Detailed information for garbage_egroups_size_check:
Node 10.1.11.32:
FAIL: 67% of disk 415104829 occupied by garbage egroups
Refer to KB 1574 (http://portal.nutanix.com/kb/1574) for details on garbage_egroups_size_check or Recheck with: ncc health_checks stargate_checks garbage_egroups_size_check
on 2019.02.11 LTS
Disk 415104829 (SSD) was added yesterday. I also added one ssd to 2 nodes tonight. The new ssd’s are very busy right now.
Garbage egroups is data that is no longer in use by the system but that is still taking up space. Due to the way the Nutanix file system works, it is expected to have a small amount of garbage on the cluster. However, the system is periodically cleaning up garbage egroups in the background via Curator scans.
Things that need to be check:
Make sure you are on the latest NCC version (4.0.1), as the thresholds for this check were adjusted in NCC 3.9.0 and above for improved accuracy.
Make sure you are on the 5.10+ AOS version.
Make sure the curator service is running. You can check this using two commands:
nutanix@cvm$ cluster status
nutanix@cvm$watch -d genesis status
Garbage details are found using nutanix@cvm$curator_cli display_garbage_report this command.
Garbage egroups is data that is no longer in use by the system but that is still taking up space. Due to the way the Nutanix file system works, it is expected to have a small amount of garbage on the cluster. However, the system is periodically cleaning up garbage egroups in the background via Curator scans.
Things that need to be check:
Make sure you are on the latest NCC version (4.0.1), as the thresholds for this check were adjusted in NCC 3.9.0 and above for improved accuracy.
Make sure you are on the 5.10+ AOS version.
Make sure the curator service is running. You can check this using two commands:
nutanix@cvm$ cluster status
nutanix@cvm$watch -d genesis status
Garbage details are found using nutanix@cvm$curator_cli display_garbage_report this command.