The problem is we initialize _last_interpret when failure_detector
object is constructed. When interpret() runs for the first time, the
_last_interpret value is not the last time we run interpret() but the
time we initialize failure_detector object.
Fix by initializing _last_interpret inside interpret().
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:04 2016] INFO [shard 0] storage_service - Node 127.0.0.1 state jump to normal
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:04 2016] INFO [shard 0] storage_service - NORMAL: node is now in normal status
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:04 2016] INFO [shard 0] gossip - Waiting for gossip to settle before accepting client requests...
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:12 2016] INFO [shard 0] gossip - No gossip backlog; proceeding
Starting listening for CQL clients on 127.0.0.1:9042...
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:12 2016] INFO [shard 0] gossip - Node 127.0.0.2 is now part of the cluster
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:12 2016] INFO [shard 0] gossip - InetAddress 127.0.0.2 is now UP
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:13 2016] INFO [shard 0] gossip - do_gossip_to_live_member: Favor newly added node 127.0.0.2
[Thu Feb 18 02:40:13 2016] WARN [shard 0] failure_detector - Not marking nodes down due to local pause of 9091 > 5000 (milliseconds)
Backport: CASSANDRA-10330
ae4cd69 Print versions for gossip states in gossipinfo
For instance, the version for each state, which can be useful for
diagnosing the reason for any missing states. Also instead of just
omitting the TOKENS state, let's indicate whether the state was actually
present or not.
We have this call chain,
gossiper::run -> do_status_check -> interpret -> convict -> mark_dead
since gossip::run is executed inside a seastar thread, we can assure all
functions above run inside a seastar thread.