My brand new install of 7.2 kept dying after about 4-6 days. It would just slow down, crawl along and then stop.. No crash, just grind to a halt and just stop..
I turned off journaling by going back to ext2 partitions and it has been up ever since. (Going on 60 days now in a heavily used environment) I still have no idea why it would crawl to a halt, there wer no error messages.. but changing the filesystems from ext3 to ext2 fixed the problem. Go Figure. Darryl At 01:14 PM 16/01/2002, ABrady wrote: >On Tue, 15 Jan 2002 19:27:54 -0500 >"Matt Sales" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> implied: > > > Hello, > > I have recently have put RH7.2 on two machines. I upgraded an Intel > > Celeron 400MHz that was working great running 6.0. I also put 7.2 on > > a Pentium II-MMX 266MHz machine that has a brand new hard drive. > > Everything seemed to be fine; the install went smoothly, etc., but now > > both machines are crashing frequently. Neither have crashed while I > > work on them, but if they're left alone anywhere from 1/2 hour to 3 > > hours, they crash. The monitor goes dark and I cannot get any > > responses from them--no pings, nothing. I have to pull the power cord > > to restart them. I have been monitoring this list on and off, and I > > have not seen other people with this problem... It's frustrating > > because I've never had this problem with RedHat before (5.2 and 6.0) . > > Now I have a backup DNS server that won't stay up. If anyone could > > point me toward an answer it would be much appreciated. > >I've uninstalled 7.2 and went back to 7.1 due to problems such as your >DNS stuff dying. There are ways to keep it working, but it became too >much for me to deal with after finding a new one every day (was over 10 >before I dumped 7.2). > >One method is to crontab a restart of services that die. Since I >couldn't figure out how often it was happening (and it looks like you >have the same problem) I ran it every hour. Cute if someone is in the >middle of a lookup when it gets restarted. > >As for lockups, is there a desktop involved? Any NFS exports from or to >the machine? any processes that go into overload and suck up all ram or >cpu resources? > >Is there any clue in the logs about something failing or something >getting killed or anything else about the time the lockups start? > >A desktop using KDE or gnome would be suspect IMHO since I've had >problems with both, particularly gnome. Screensavers can also cause >similar problems. > >How much ram is installed? It might be too little, or even a bad module >(I had that problem once with a ram module causing lockups; it became >more evident as time went by and I started getting lockups in the middle >of doing things). > >One way to try to track it down is telnet into the machine (if possible) >and see if it's really locked up or if it's just bogged down. That might >not be helpfull because you say you aren't getting pings, but if >something is really screwy it might prevent answering pings because it's >using all it has for running whatever is going nuts. If you get an >immediate refusal, chances are it's dead. If it takes a long time before >timeout or letting you in, it's likely something eating all it can get >of the machine's resources. If it times out, you might be able to get in >setting a much longer timeout then use top to see if you can find what's >running rampant. > >-- >Intel: where Quality is job number 0.9998782345! > > > >_______________________________________________ >Redhat-list mailing list >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list _______________________________________________ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list