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How to Understand MDS States in CephFS
Nawaz Dhandala · 2026-03-31 · via OneUptime Blog

Overview

CephFS Metadata Servers (MDS) transition through a defined set of states as they start up, serve clients, handle failover, and shut down. Understanding these states is essential for diagnosing MDS issues, interpreting health alerts, and knowing when action is required in your Rook-Ceph cluster.

Check Current MDS State

kubectl -n rook-ceph exec -it deploy/rook-ceph-tools -- ceph fs status cephfs
kubectl -n rook-ceph exec -it deploy/rook-ceph-tools -- ceph mds dump

MDS State Reference

Active States

up:active       - Normal operating state. The MDS is serving client requests
                  for one or more metadata subtrees (ranks).

up:standby      - The MDS daemon is running and healthy but not serving
                  any rank. Ready to take over if an active MDS fails.

up:standby-replay - Actively replaying the journal of an active MDS to
                  minimize failover time. Tracks a specific active rank.

Transition States

up:boot         - The MDS just started and is registering with the monitor.
                  Transient state during startup.

up:creating     - The MDS is creating the initial journal and metadata
                  structures for a new rank.

up:starting     - The MDS is loading metadata from its journal before
                  becoming active. May take time on large filesystems.

up:stopping     - The MDS is flushing its journal and evicting clients
                  in preparation for graceful shutdown.

up:replay       - The MDS is replaying its journal after a crash or restart.
                  Clients cannot connect until replay completes.

up:reconnect    - The MDS completed journal replay and is waiting for
                  clients to reconnect within the session timeout window.

up:rejoin       - The MDS is rejoining the cluster after reconnect and
                  reintegrating with other active MDS daemons.

up:resolve      - The MDS is resolving distributed metadata inconsistencies
                  after a multi-active failover scenario.

Failure States

up:damaged      - The MDS encountered unrecoverable journal or metadata
                  corruption and cannot proceed without manual repair.

down:failed     - The MDS daemon crashed or was killed and has not been
                  replaced by a standby yet.

down:dne        - The MDS rank does not exist (no MDS assigned).

down:stopped    - The filesystem or rank was explicitly stopped via
                  "ceph fs set <fs_name> down true" or "ceph fs fail <fs_name>".

Common State Transitions

A healthy startup sequence looks like:

up:boot -> up:creating (new fs) or up:replay (existing) -> up:reconnect -> up:rejoin -> up:active

A failover sequence:

active MDS crashes -> down:failed -> standby promoted -> up:replay -> up:reconnect -> up:rejoin -> up:active

Investigate a Stuck MDS

If an MDS is stuck in up:replay or up:reconnect for too long:

kubectl -n rook-ceph logs -l app=rook-ceph-mds,rook_file_system=cephfs \
  --tail=200 | grep -E "replay|reconnect|error"

Force the stuck MDS to fail so a standby takes over:

kubectl -n rook-ceph exec -it deploy/rook-ceph-tools -- \
  ceph mds fail cephfs:0

Summary

CephFS MDS states reflect the daemon lifecycle from boot through normal operation to failure and recovery. Key states to watch in production are up:active (healthy), up:replay and up:reconnect (transitional - acceptable for short durations), and up:damaged or down:failed (require immediate attention). Monitoring MDS states via ceph fs status is a fundamental part of operating a healthy Rook-Ceph CephFS deployment.