On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 10:49:08AM -0400, Kyle Yencer wrote: > Geoffrey, > > Has this driver been known to cause stability issues?
the driver was written in 1996 by Donald Becker and maintained until 1999/2000 the last modification was done on 31.Aug 2000, hardware has changed, and the e100 driver is actively maintained by intel ... draw your conclusions ... best, Herbert > Sometimes the machine will remain ping-able, but none of the services will > respond (i.e., sshd, httpd) > > Kyle > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Geoffrey D. Bennett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2003 9:47 AM > Subject: Re: [vserver] Stability Issues > > > > On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 09:18:10AM -0400, Kyle Yencer wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > > I have been working using the VServer 0.22 and ctx-17 in a scenario > > > with anywhere from 5 to 20 VServers running, some of which run java > > > inside of them. In the beginning phases, the server would crash > > > anywhere from 7 to 10 days, however now it will crash almost daily > > > and at that multiple times sometimes. The Host OS is Redhat 7.3 and > > > the kernel is a vanilla patched 2.4.20 kernel. I have also tried > > > the 2.4.19-ctx15 kernel as will with no better results. The machine > > > is a dual xeon with 2 gigs of ram, it's quite possible the issue is > > > hardware related, the server is running a i2o raid card and eepro100 > > > nics. Has anyone ran into similiar problems? The only thing i've > > > been able to grab before the server crashed is the last proc, which > > > coincidently happened to be a java process. Please let me know if > > > anyone has seen similar behavior, or where anyone has found stable > > > ground if this is normal. > > > > Hi Kyle, > > > > If you are using the eepro100 driver, try using the e100 driver > > instead. > > > > Regards, > > -- > > Geoffrey D. Bennett, RHCE, RHCX [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Senior Systems Engineer http://www.netcraft.com.au/geoffrey/ > > NetCraft Australia Pty Ltd http://www.netcraft.com.au/linux/ > > >
