DRBD detects split brain at the time connectivity becomes available again and the peer nodes exchange the initial DRBD protocol handshake. If DRBD detects that both nodes are (or were at some point, while disconnected) in the primary role, it immediately tears down the replication connection. The tell-tale sign of this is a message like the following appearing in the system log:
Split-Brain detected, dropping connection!
After split brain has been detected, one node will always
have the resource in a
StandAlone connection state.
The other might either also be in the StandAlone
state (if both nodes detected the split brain simultaneously),
or in
WFConnection (if the peer tore down the
connection before the other node had a chance to detect split
brain).
At this point, unless you configured DRBD to automatically recover from split brain, you must manually intervene by selecting one node whose modifications will be discarded (this node is referred to as the split brain victim). This intervention is made with the following commands:
drbdadm secondaryresourcedrbdadm -- --discard-my-data connectresource
On the other node (the
split brain survivor), if its connection
state is also StandAlone, you would enter:
drbdadm connect resource
You may omit this step if the node is already in the
WFConnection state; it will then reconnect
automatically.
If the resource affected by the split brain is a stacked resource, use
drbdadm --stacked instead
of just drbdadm.
Upon connection, your split brain victim immediately changes
its connection state to SyncTarget, and has its
modifications overwritten by the remaining primary node.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
The split brain victim is not subjected to a full device synchronization. Instead, it has its local modifications rolled back, and any modifications made on the split brain survivor propagate to the victim. |
After re-synchronization has completed, the split brain is considered resolved and the two nodes form a fully consistent, redundant replicated storage system again.