Jumping late on this thread, pardon my ignorance of some details...
On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 4:35 PM, Steve Thompson s...@vgersoft.com wrote:
Interesting. It looks like some kind of RPC failure. During the hang, I
cannot contact the nfs service via RPC:
# rpcinfo -t server nfs
rpcinfo: RPC:
On Thu, 19 Apr 2012, Giovanni Tirloni wrote:
Did you run this command during the hang or is it constantly returning
you that?
It is returning the time out only during the hang; the rest of the time
it works normally.
If the later, are you blocking UDP on either the server or the client?
No
Have you looked at the rpcd process with top or ps to see what state it
is in? What about running strace? What about your dns server or any
other (reverse) client lookup services that you might have enabled?
Nataraj
___
CentOS mailing list
All,
Many thanks to everyone who commented on this issue. I believe that I have
solved it.
It turns out that the number of nfsd's that I was running (32) was way too
low. I observed that adding more nfsd's when NFS was hung always caused
the hang to go away immediately. Now I am in the tuning
Interesting. It looks like some kind of RPC failure. During the hang, I
cannot contact the nfs service via RPC:
# rpcinfo -t server nfs
rpcinfo: RPC: Timed out
program 13 version 0 is not available
even though it is supposedly available:
# rpcinfo -p server
program vers proto port
On Apr 18, 2012, at 3:35 PM, Steve Thompson s...@vgersoft.com wrote:
Interesting. It looks like some kind of RPC failure. During the hang, I
cannot contact the nfs service via RPC:
# rpcinfo -t server nfs
rpcinfo: RPC: Timed out
program 13 version 0 is not available
even though it
On Wed, 18 Apr 2012, Ross Walker wrote:
Is iptables disabled? If not, problem with rules or RPC helper?
Yes, iptables is not in use.
What about selinux?
Disabled.
-Steve
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
I have four NFS servers running on Dell hardware (PE2900) under CentOS
5.7, x86_64. The number of NFS clients is about 170.
A few days ago, one of the four, with no apparent changes, stopped
responding to NFS requests for two minutes every half an hour (approx).
Let's call this the hang. It
On Apr 17, 2012, at 5:40 PM, Steve Thompson s...@vgersoft.com wrote:
I have four NFS servers running on Dell hardware (PE2900) under CentOS
5.7, x86_64. The number of NFS clients is about 170.
A few days ago, one of the four, with no apparent changes, stopped
responding to NFS requests
On Apr 17, 2012, at 6:49 PM, Ross Walker rswwal...@gmail.com wrote:
Just a shot in the dark here.
Take a look at the NIC and switch port flow control status during an outage,
they may be paused due to switch load.
Is there anything else on the network switches that might flood them every
On Tue, 17 Apr 2012, Ross Walker wrote:
Take a look at the NIC and switch port flow control status during an outage,
they may be paused due to switch load.
Is there anything else on the network switches that might flood them every
half hour for a two minute duration?
Unfortunately not. All
Also shot in the dark from me.
There maybe some IP conflict in the network.
Sent from my iPhone
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Tue, 17 Apr 2012, Ross Walker wrote:
Let me also add that constant spanning tree convergence can cause this
too. Make sure your choice of protocol and priority suit your topology
and equipment.
Gives me an idea! The switch is under control of different people. I did
have a new VLAN
On Wed, 18 Apr 2012, Fajar Priyanto wrote:
Also shot in the dark from me.
There maybe some IP conflict in the network.
Yes, I thought of that one too. I am in control of all IP's on the
network, so I am sure that nothing changed around the time that the
trouble started. I checked for that
On Apr 17, 2012, at 6:57 PM, Steve Thompson wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2012, Ross Walker wrote:
Let me also add that constant spanning tree convergence can cause this
too. Make sure your choice of protocol and priority suit your topology
and equipment.
Gives me an idea! The switch is under
15 matches
Mail list logo