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Home/ Questions/Q 3230308
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T16:54:42+00:00 2026-05-17T16:54:42+00:00

I am running two erlang nodes with a replicated mnesia database. Whenever I tried

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I am running two erlang nodes with a replicated mnesia database. Whenever I tried to start one of them while mnesia IS NOT Running on the other one, mnesia:wait_for_tables(?TABS,?TIMEOUT), would hang on the node that its called from. I need to have a structure where (if both nodes are not running), I can start working with one while the other is down and later decide to bring the other one up yet continue to work well. I need to be sure that the first node that was running has updated the later when it gets up. Does this necessarily require me to have one as the master?

%%% Edited…………………………………………………………………

Oh, I’ve got it. The database I was using had a couple of fragmented tables. Some of the fragments had been distributed across the network for load balancing. So, Mnesia on one host would try to load them across the network and would fail since mnesia on the other one is down!

I guess this has got nothing to do with a mnesia master node. But I still would love to understand the significance of the same because I’ve not used it before, yet, I always play with distributed schemas.

Thanks again…

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T16:54:42+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 4:54 pm

    Mnesia master nodes are used to resolve split-brain situations in a fairly brutal fashion. If mnesia discovers a split-brain situation, it will issue an event, “running partitioned network”. One way to respond to this would be to set master nodes to the “island” that you want to keep, and then restart the other nodes. When they come back up, they will unconditionally load tables from the master nodes.

    There is another mechanism in mnesia, called force_load. One should be very careful with it, but in the case where you have two nodes, A and B, terminate B (A logs B as down), then terminate A, then restart B, B will have no info about when A went down, so will refuse to load tables that have a copy on A. If you know that A is not coming back soon, you could choose to call mnesia:force_load_tables(Ts) on B, which will cause it to run with its own copies. Once A comes back up, it will detect that B is up, and will load tables from it. As you can see, there are several other scenarios where you can end up with an inconsistent database. Mnesia will not fix that, but tries to provide tools to resolve the situation if it arises. In the scenario above, unfortunately, mnesia will give you no hints, but it is possible to create an application that detects the problem.

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