π ~1 min read
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
Storage paths repeatedly fail and recover, causing latency spikes and occasional I/O errors.
Environment & Reproduction
On SAN-backed RHEL 8 hosts, path state changes appear under moderate or burst traffic.
Root Cause Analysis
Incorrect multipath settings, HBA timeouts, or SAN zoning inconsistencies lead to path instability.
Quick Triage
Run multipath -ll, check systemctl status multipathd, and review journalctl for path checker events.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
Correlate path flaps with switch logs, HBA firmware levels, and /etc/multipath.conf policy settings.

Solution – Primary Fix
Apply vendor-recommended multipath parameters, restart multipathd safely, and align HBA timeout values.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Temporarily disable unstable paths or use maintenance zoning while permanent SAN fixes are implemented.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
Path states remain stable, no I/O errors appear, and application latency returns to baseline.
Rollback Plan
Revert multipath.conf and firmware settings to previous validated versions if instability increases.
Prevention & Hardening
Maintain certified HCL combinations and continuously monitor path health metrics in production.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Can appear with LVM metadata warnings and filesystem stalls under failover pressure.
Related tutorial: View the step-by-step tutorial for rhel-8.
View all rhel-8 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub β
Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.
References & Further Reading
Consult Red Hat DM-Multipath documentation and storage vendor interoperability guidance for RHEL 8.
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