Hi Gabriele,

There have been some fixes to the APR library since 1.5.2, notably on
the Solaris apr_pollset_poll() implementation, though I can only think
of a bug [1] pertaining to MPM event (not MPM worker which you seem to
be using).

It could be worth upgrading to a more recent APR-1.6.5 or APR-1.7.0 still.

Regards;
Yann.

[1] https://bz.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=61786

On Tue, Feb 9, 2021 at 11:07 AM Gabriele Bulfon
<gbul...@sonicle.com.invalid> wrote:
>
> Hi, I finally could produce the httpd blocked problem and ran a script to 
> dump stack of all running processes/threads.
> They strangely look all quite the same! I attach here all the httpd threads 
> dumps, maybe you can help us see why it was blocked?
>
> Thanks!
> Gabriele
>
>
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>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Da: Rainer Canavan <rainer.cana...@avenga.com>
> A: users@httpd.apache.org
> Data: 2 novembre 2020 17.19.27 CET
> Oggetto: Re: [users@httpd] Self built httpd 2.4.43 problems
>
> On Mon, Nov 2, 2020 at 4:17 PM Gabriele Bulfon
> <gbul...@sonicle.com.invalid> wrote:
> >
> > Thanks, I configured and ran server-status after stopping/starting apache.
> > Top output is:
> >
> [...]
>
> > What should I check?
> > Also, when system blocks I won't be able to see server-status, as it will 
> > be not responding.
> > Should I check it daily and look for a specific info that grows?
>
> "requests currently being processed" would probably increase if
> threads are permanently blocked. I would recommend logging this every
> few seconds, so that you can at least check after the fact how quickly
> the system filled up.
>
> You should have ExtendedStatus enabled, which should give you a
> complete list of all threads and their states. Any that are active
> (probably "W", definitively not "." or "_") processing a single
> request for extended periods are suspicious, especially if multiple of
> the same kind strat piling up.
>
> If httpd does not respond to requests anymore, and you have multiple
> worker childs, you can sometimes get away with killing one and try to
> squeeze a status request in there before it gets overrun again.
>
> Anyway, serverstatus will only provide rough hints of what's going on.
> If it is indeed httpd, you'll probably need gdb backtraces.
>
> rainer
>
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