On Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 07:57:33PM +0000, Jeff LaCoursiere wrote: > > Sorry again for the only marginal relation to asterisk, but the issue does > affect the voice performance I am experiencing, so I am soothing my guilt > with that. > > Bet you don't see this every day: > > ast% uptime > 13:48:08 up 981 days, 18:29, 1 user, load average: 1.08, 1.02, 1.01 > ast% > > I *REALLY* want this machine to see 1000 days uptime, if for nothing other > than bragging rights. Its been through mysql and asterisk upgrades, a > horrible hacking nightmare that very nearly made me reboot, and several > power outages where the batteries lasted JUST long enough to keep her up. > > After all of this, I find I may have to reboot after all. Because there > is a [EMAIL PROTECTED] process running, consuming 100% CPU (note the load > average), > and I cannot seem to kill it: > > ast% ps auxw | grep modprobe > root 17744 99.9 0.0 2688 412 ? RN Nov03 23223:01 modprobe > -r ipt_state
modprobe -r is basically rmmod . rmmod and insmod and nowdays mostly wrappers to kernel code. So while an strace of that process might give some more information about it, I believe that the kernel-level backtrace would be more interesting. For that, try either the 'p' or 't' sysrq commands. 'p' gives a stack trace of the current process. 't': of all the processes. You can give a sysrq command either through the console (on x86: alt-sysrq-<key>) or: echo <key> >/proc/sysrq-trigger The output goes to the kernel logs, e.g. in dmesg . > ast% ps ealx | grep modprobe | grep -v grep > 4 0 17744 1 39 19 2688 412 - RN ? 23223:38 > modprobe -r ipt_state > ast% sudo kill 17744 > ast% sudo kill 17744 > ast% sudo kill -9 17744 > ast% sudo kill -9 17744 This will probably apply when the process will leave whatever busy context it is in. > ast% !ps > ps ealx | grep modprobe | grep -v grep > 4 0 17744 1 39 19 2688 412 - RN ? 23224:41 > modprobe -r ipt_state > ast% > > You may also notice that I tried "renice" to bump it all the way to +19 > and still it consumes 100% of the CPU. The result for asterisk is that I > hear bits of robot noise during conversations, which is annoying as hell > but not neccessarily show stopping. But for another 19 days?? Argg! > > I assume that because it is 'modprobe' it has tickled some kernel bug that > is merrily spinning away and won't respond to interrupts. I even tried to > stop it with gdb and strace, both of which also hung and had to be killed > with -9. > > It seems to be related to me screwing with the iptables a few weeks ago. > > Any ideas other than rebooting? BTW: what kernel? What ditsribution? -- Tzafrir Cohen icq#16849755 jabber:[EMAIL PROTECTED] +972-50-7952406 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.xorcom.com iax:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/tzafrir _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users