Hi Alain, I'm sorry to for the late response since I do working deep on this problem. Finally I already get answer for this particular problem. This problem happened to all my M10i & M7i router that running JunOS 8.5 R3.4 (this is the problem) and FYI, I need to use JunOS 8.5R3.4 because of the new PIC 4 port STM-1 SFP interfaces. The history as I said before that my M-series router hang and need to restart the cfeb and sometime I need to hard reboot the chassis. During last 2 weeks my 9 M10i suddenly running with backup routing-engine and my 10 M7i freeze/hang and all running with JunOS 8.5R3.4. Even the old router that never problem when running JunOS 8.0R34 after I did upgrade to JunOS 8.5R3.4 also had the same problem. The key is on my M7i router, during the problem no alarm indicator in the chassis for all interfaces and chassis itself. Also the router didn't create core dump at all. JTAC already create PR release for this problem. From the PR said that this problem happened to JunOS 8.5R3.4 or above.
Since there is no JunOS release to solved this problem, I have to downgrade all my M-series (total 33 routers) that running JunOS 8.5R3.4 to JunOS 8.4R4.2. It's going to be along hard work weekend .... Regards, Beny D Setyawan -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2008 6:35 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net Subject: RE: [j-nsp] Best practice to manage log information Hi Beny Sory for this late answer I am not sure I catch you well but if you're wondering what is the root cause of your hard disk activity just see the age of the different files on it. If you say that you have some other traces leading to some "Mpls_statistic" files changed every 5 minutes, I am quite sure that's an heavy load for the hard disk. Just think if you realy need this trace (statistics) to be activated ! Regards Alain -----Message d'origine----- De : Beny D Setyawan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Envoyé : samedi 21 juin 2008 18:34 À : Briant,A,Alain,JPECS R; juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net Objet : RE: [j-nsp] Best practice to manage log information Hi Alain, My router basically use bellow configuration for the system syslog. syslog { user * { any emergency; } host 10.xxx.xxx.xxx { ### to syslog server ### any any; authorization any; interactive-commands any; } file messages { authorization info; daemon any; kernel any; user any; pfe any; interactive-commands critical; } file log_config_user { authorization any; interactive-commands any; archive size 5m files 5 world-readable; } file new_log { any notice; authorization info; daemon any; kernel any; archive size 10m files 5; } source-address 10.xxx.xxx.x; } What I'm trying to do is removing log_config_user and new_log and send it to syslog, also change the configuration of file messages. But in mpls protocols, we used auto-bandwidth mechanism with file mpls_statistic on it. Mpls_statistic file changes every 5 minutes and saved it into the harddisk also making the harddisk doing write-erase. I'm not sure that mpls_statistic need to be change also based on trends of the traffic itself on the mpls network. What still out of my mind is the root caused that making harddisk busy, is it the syslog or mpls_statistic and I'm sure that harddisk working every time just like others harddsik. Thanks, Beny D Setyawan -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, June 20, 2008 7:37 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net Subject: RE: [j-nsp] Best practice to manage log information Hi Beny I believe the best Start is the default syslog config of JUNOS: system { syslog { user * { any emergency; } file messages { any notice; authorization info; } file interactive-commands { interactive-commands any; } } } After that you can add, as new target, the syslog server and add some more traces but carefully. You must keep in mind that for local logs (on the hard disk) if you see your log files rotating too fast (I mean if your files with the default size and number do not cover more than One week of time) they will be useless. Regarding the trace-options you must be careful also with some "flag all" statements that are writing on the disk a hudge amount of data. We've had sometimes some M series hanged because of some heavy traces. First thing so is to have a quick look at your log files: "Show log ?" If you see some of them that are rotating too fast, start removing some traces leading that. Hope this help Alain -----Message d'origine----- De : [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] De la part de Beny D Setyawan Envoyé : vendredi 20 juin 2008 13:30 À : juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net Objet : [j-nsp] Best practice to manage log information Hi List, Somehow my m-series hang and need to reboot. JTAC suspected that this is due to harddisk busy, since there were so many log that write-erase to the harddisk and suggested to reduce that process. Does anyone has information what is the best practice on how to manage syslog severity on the Juniper router? Which log should be send to syslog server and should be save also in the router itself. The goal is how to make the router healhty by reduce log of changing any information on the router from harddisk on the routing-engine perspective. But in the other hand we need the log information for the NMS. Thanks & Rgds, Beny D Setyawan _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp