Restoring config servers, particularly if you have had some sort of catastrophic event is tricky, but not impossible. But, before we go any further, a big bold caveat:
BACK UP EVERYTHING
That means taking a back up of all three config servers. I am going to give you some advice, and it is generally correct, but please, please take a back up of every current config server instance before you overwrite/replace anything
As a quick explanation, config servers are not configured as a replica set - each config server instance is supposed to be identical (at least for all the collections that matter) to the others. Hence, any healthy config server can be used to replace a non-healthy config server and you can then follow the tutorial you mentioned to get back to a good config.
The key to recovery is to identify the healthy config server and then use that to replace the others - you then end up with 3 identical config servers.
There is more than one way to do this, they basically fall into three categories:
1) Use the error message
The error message that is printed out actually lets you know which config server it believes is health, though that is not obvious from the messaging. Here's how to read it generically:
ERROR: config servers not in sync! config servers <healthy-server> and <out-of-sync-server> differ
Basically the first one in the list is the healthy one, in your case that would be mongocfg1.testing.com:27000
. That is our first candidate for a healthy config database.
2) Use dbhash
to compare all three and pick the ones that agree
On each config server switch to the config database using use config
, run db.runCommand("dbhash")
and compare the hashes for the collections below:
- chunks
- databases
- settings
- shards
- version
You are looking for two servers that agree, and using that as the basis to determine that the version of the config database on those hosts is basically trustworthy and should be used to seed the rest.
3. Manually inspect the collections in the config database
Finally, take a look at the config database, and pay attention to the collections listed in the second option above. This is a straight judgement call based on your familiarity with your data.
Hopefully all three methods point you at the same host (or hosts). That config server should be used to seed the other two (after you have taken backups so you can go back). That is basically your best bet. Should that fail, then you may want to try one of the other versions (from the backups) - always making sure that when you start them, all three are identical.
Finally, always ensure that all mongos
processes are using the same config server string, and that all 3 servers are always listed in the same order on every process - not doing so across all mongos
processes can lead to (very) odd results.
You can follow your original strategy with a minor tweak: add Google Compute (GC) nodes into the current replica set and keep them in sync until ready to cut over. The only thing you need to change is to set those new GC nodes to have priority 0. They will be full members of the set, they just cannot be elected primary (or trigger elections).
Once you are ready to switch over to the Google nodes, you need only reset the priority to 1 (or whatever your normal values are), and then step down or remove the AWS nodes from the set. You can guarantee that a GC node is elected primary by giving them a higher priority than the AWS nodes before issuing the step down.
Best Answer
If secondary do "initial sync", it will reach primary first, but then it will "sleep" (this case 600 seconds) to fall back and after that, it will keep syncing 600s behind.
You can see that (sleep) in mongod.log if you watch what is happening at end of initial sync. After that sleep, if you look "last" document in opLog, it's time stamp is that 600s behind. Of course you can see that with rs.printSlaveReplicationInfo() too.