On Thursday 10 April 2008 15:30:31 Erik Terpstra wrote: > Hi Nuno, > > Nuno Fernandes wrote: > > That's because thay are waiting for something that the kernel will > > provide (probably a lock). Please do: > > > > echo t > /proc/sysrq-trigger > > > > Check /var/log/messages and paste it here. > > Thanks I will provide the information next time it locks. > > > The "another" node is also with high load? Is there any program running > > at 100% CPU? > > We haven't checked if the other node has a high load, but that is > unlikely, it seems like rebooting any node will fix it. > I will check it anyway next time. > > When the system locks, the 'load' keeps rising but there is no > particular process that seems to be the cause of it. > > > If yes, i think that the first node is waiting for a lock that the > > "another" node has. Until that lock is released all processes remain in > > "D" state and the load keeps on rising. > > > > Also do: > > > > echo t > /proc/sysrq-trigger > > > > Check /var/log/messages and paste it here. > > > > Do a: > > > > ps fax > > > > also and paste it here. > > Thanks, I will. > > > I also have that problem and i'm still trying to figure it out. > > Does rebooting an arbitrary node also fix your situation? No it doesn't. I have to reboot the node that has the spinning process.
I'm upgrading to ocfs1.2.8 as i have 1.2.5 to see if it gets better :) Regards, Nuno Fernandes > > Regards, > > Erik. _______________________________________________ Ocfs2-users mailing list [email protected] http://oss.oracle.com/mailman/listinfo/ocfs2-users
