13

An odd number set is recommended. My doubt is as one goes down from an odd set, we have an even number set. The number of members fluctuate between even and odd when they go down one by one. We always don’t have odd member scenario. Can some one explain how MongoDB voting works?

1
  • normally a good way of solving this is to enter a abrtitar onto the application server specifically for voting
    – Sammaye
    Mar 24, 2013 at 12:09

1 Answer 1

47

The voting is done by a majority of voting members.

Imagine a Replica Set with three (voting) members. Let's say that Node A is primary, and nodes B+C are secondaries. Node A goes down, so nodes B+C go to election. They still do form a majority (two out of three). The election is first decided by priority. If both Nodes B & C have the same priority, then the one who is most up to date in respect to the failed primary (oplog) wins. Let's say it's Node B.

Once node A comes back alive, there is no new election. Node B remains the master, and C+A are now secondaries.

On the other hand, if two nodes go down you don't have a majority, so the replica set can't accept updates (apply writes) any more until at least one of the two failing servers becomes alive (and connected by the single surviving node) again.

Imagine now a Replica Set with four (voting) members. Let's say that Node A is primary, and nodes B+C+D are secondaries. Node A goes down, so nodes B+C+D go to election. They of course form majority (three out of four)

However, if two nodes go down you don't have a majority (two out of four), so the replica set is again at read only mode.

So that's why an odd number is recommended; If you loose a single member in a 3 members replica set, it's the same as loosing a single member in a 4 members replica set: you still gain quorum majority and a new primary can be elected (the RS can still elect a new master by majority). On the other hand, if you loose two members in a 3 members replica set or a 4 members replica set (or n/2 members of n-members replica set) - again - the impact is the same: No new leader can be voted by election.

So, to make a long story short, there is no redundancy gain by having an even number of members in a replica set.

For more see election internals

9
  • 2
    The key point is having no redundancy gain out of an even set up. I got it now. Thank you so much :)
    – Srik
    Mar 24, 2013 at 12:40
  • Now one thing strikes my mind. The advantage of voting system being used in Mongo DB is also to increase availability. For example: In a 5 member setup, read only mode is reached when there are only two members left. And in a 11 member, its 5(>2). Am I right?
    – Srik
    Mar 24, 2013 at 12:50
  • Once again, Thanks for your help :)
    – Srik
    Mar 24, 2013 at 13:58
  • 1
    I think I was having the same trouble understanding this. I figured if you have 3 nodes, and one went down, what's to stop the other 2 nodes from voting for themselves and causing a stalemate. After reading ur answer, I now suppose, that the only thing that matters is the ratio of live nodes to live + down nodes (or 2/3 in your example) since all live nodes will vote for the same node. Is that correct?
    – Squirrl
    Sep 27, 2013 at 20:18
  • 1
    @Srik : Actually it's not entirely exact : A ReplicatSet can have up to 50 nodes but only 7 voting members. See here : docs.mongodb.com/manual/core/replica-set-elections/…. Thus, if you have 50 members, only 7 are voting. If you lose 4 of these voting members, you are in read only mode because you cannot reach anymore the majority of the voting members so you cannot start a voting round. Jun 14, 2016 at 16:27

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.