OK Ta,
So I will trawl through all the logs for the time when I did the destroy
and look for what processes were killed by the system
Thanks
On 11 April 2012 11:44, Deanna Earley <dee(a)earlsoft.co.uk> wrote:
Thus sounds like the out of memory killer. You should
find at least a few
entries in the system log detailing what was killed and why.
Where this is logged on a Debian system, I don't know.
--
Deanna Earley
----- Reply message -----
From: "Keith Williams" <keithwilliamsnp(a)gmail.com>
To: <users(a)lists.bitfolk.com>
Subject: [bitfolk] Nagios warning
Date: Wed, Apr 11, 2012 10:42
Yesterday I was away from the computer and came back to see a series of
Nagios alerts, related to DNS. It appears that the Bitfolk dns servers were
unable to update a zone from my server. I was unable to login to my server,
so went into Xen. It was unable to either shutdown or reboot. When I opened
a console window, it was impossible to read as text was scrolling up
continuously and rapidly. I had no alternative but to Destroy. A scary
option, but within seconds it did the trick and all is running well now.
I have scanned the logs this morning trying to find out what had gone
wrong. I realise it was something going haywire and consuming all the
resources, but please could anyone give me pointers on how to determine
what it was that was behaving so badly?
Keith
--
Keith Williams
"If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can
solve them." Isaac Asimov
He's doing it again!
www.justgiving.com/France-The-Wrong-Way
Tailor Made English
www.tmenglish.org
--
Keith Williams
"If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can
solve them." Isaac Asimov
He's doing it again!
www.justgiving.com/France-The-Wrong-Way
Tailor Made English
www.tmenglish.org