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I have a cluster of 5 nodes on which I created a few tables on HBase and populated it with data. One of the nodes failed and now I am able to list all of the tables on HBase but a scan or disable of two of the tables gives

NativeException: org.apache.hadoop.hbase.client.NoServerForRegionException: No server address listed in .META. for region TableName,,1295871604968

I want to drop this table but cannot get past this problem. I'm using the hbase shell for this.

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  • For what it's worth, long after the fact...I saw this error when I created a table with Snappy compression, but did not yet have Snappy set up for HBase. I tried altering the table to set compression to NONE but the error remained. I then dropped and recreated the table and the error disappeared.
    – dnuttle
    Aug 28, 2013 at 23:48
  • i solve mine by accessing hbase shell, disable 'table' and enable it thanks to @WattsInABox for the idea
    – kudarap
    Dec 13, 2015 at 3:35

5 Answers 5

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I resolved the problem by deleting the table entries in the .META. table for the tables that gave the error and then recreated the table. I think the .META. table saved the location to the region on the dead node and where unable to update the region location for some reason when the node died. After the entries was deleted I was able to recreate the table. I found a discussion about it here that help send me on the right path.

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  • How did you delete .META. entries?
    – zohar
    Jul 11, 2011 at 14:10
  • The .META. table is just like any other table so you just delete the rows for those entries the same way you would delete rows in another table.
    – Cornelius
    Jul 12, 2011 at 7:45
  • I did it but when I create new table I get the same problem. any idea?
    – zohar
    Jul 12, 2011 at 8:35
  • No not sure then what it is. Perhaps you should post a question on it with the details of your specific scenario.
    – Cornelius
    Jul 12, 2011 at 10:46
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Is it possible to restart the node?

HBase should have redistributed the regions to other nodes. There are probably a few reasons that this wouldn't have happened, but the one I can think of off the top of my head is that you have a corrupted HDFS. This could happen if you don't have replication in your data nodes (or replication turned below the number of number of node failures). Check your file system (hadoop fsck /)

Also, it is helpful to list the version of hbase and hadoop you are using. If possible, move to HBase version 0.90 with the hadoop 0.20-append branch (included in CDH3)

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  • No go on the restart of the node, the node is broken for good.
    – Cornelius
    Jan 28, 2011 at 9:56
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We ran into a similar issue, but we swear we didn't have a node go down. However, regardless of how it happened (since we're still not quite sure), how we fixed it was we took a snapshot of the messed-up table and recreated the table from that snapshot.

scan 'mytable'
ERROR: No server address listed in hbase:meta for region mytable,,1408136497251.5110a0bae8315ed52af93663401ab415. containing row

Turns out even though the table is messed up in the meta table, the data was not messed up and we were able to take a new snapshot of it, drop, and clone.

snapshot 'mytable', 'mytable-Snapshot-2014-08-25'
disable 'mytable'
drop 'mytable'
clone_snapshot 'mytable-Snapshot-2014-08-25', 'mytable'
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try

flush '.META.'

and

major_compact '.META.'

in the hbase shell & try scanning the table again.

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In our case, we were seeing this error when someone accidentally left one of our tables in a 'disabled' state. This resulted in the table having 0 regions and therefor "No server address listed in hbase:meta". The fix was to realize it was disabled and then re-enable it:

hbase is_disabled 'table name'

hbase enable 'table name'

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