[ale] Lab Workstation Mystery

Jim Kinney jkinney at jimkinney.us
Mon Mar 28 13:30:13 EDT 2016


Microwave!!!

The EM field from those can cause screens to be wacky, wiggly while they run . I moved my desk from the opposite side of the wall from the home microwave and still had to get 10' away to stop interference.

Bit flips happen.

On March 28, 2016 1:20:45 PM EDT, Todor Fassl <fassl.tod at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>We've run every kind of hardware diagnostic we can think of. Besides, 
>it's just these 14 machines in the 2 shared spaces. Identical machines 
>in private offices don't seem to have any problem.H
>
>But, you're right. Ssome kind of power problem is the best theory I've 
>seen for a while. The 2 rooms are in different buildings and they never
>
>had a problem before. But maybe somebody is plugging something in. Come
>
>to think of it, we had a similar problem years ago when a student put a
>
>microwave oven in his office. The computers on the other side of the 
>wall kept going down. I don't know enough about electricity to explain 
>that but the microwave oven and the computer were plugged into outlets 
>on opposite sides of the same wall.
>
>What kind of gizmo would a grad student be bringing into a lab that 
>would make linux workstations freeze up?
>
>Another reason this theory makes sense is that I haven't gotten a
>single 
>complaint about the machines going down. You'd think if they were going
>
>down while people were using them, I'd get complaints. People are
>always 
>logged in when they go down but that doesn't mean anything since they 
>tend to walk away w/o logging out. I've looked for patterns in the list
>
>of users who were logged in whan a machine went down but didn't see
>any. 
>I can't rule out that it's somebody doing something though.  There
>might 
>be a pattern and I just didn't see it. But I am sure there isn't one
>guy 
>who is always logged in whan a machine goes down.
>
>On 03/28/2016 11:05 AM, James Taylor wrote:
>> The most common, if not the only, reason I've seen partitions get
>marked read-only is when I've had power glitches that that caused a
>very brief interruption in connectivity to the drives.
>> Normally that is not an issue with locally attached drives on
>workstations, but stranger things have happened.
>> Are the workstations on UPS or is the power to the rooms conditioned
>properly.
>> -jt
>>
>>
>> James Taylor
>> 678-697-9420
>> james.taylor at eastcobbgroup.com
>>
>>
>>
>>>>> Todor Fassl <fassl.tod at gmail.com> 3/28/2016 11:54 AM >>>
>> I have a mysterious problem with workstations in a shared use
>> environment. There are 2 labs in different buildings, onewith 6
>> workstations and one with 8. These workstations are used by a group
>of
>> about 30 grad student TAs. All are running ubuntu 15.10.
>Authentication
>> is via ldap and home directories are mounted  via nfs.  Every day, 2
>or
>> 3 of the machines go down. The earliest symptom I can find is that
>the
>> root filesystem is remounted read-only.  Soon they stop responding to
>> ssh and snmp and they are essentially locked up. They still respond
>to
>> pings though.
>>
>> I've caught the machines in the period where the root system is
>> read-only but I can still ssh to them. I've found that I cannot nfs
>> mount home directories on our file server.  I can mount nfs shares on
>> other servers. And I can mount the same home directories if I go to
>> another workstation. Restarting nfs on the file server has no effect.
>>
>> When I try to mount a home directory on an effected machine, the
>mount
>> just hangs.  I ran it with strace and it just showed it was waiting
>--
>> for what, I'm not sure and I don't have a screen cap available at the
>> moment. I put a packet sniffer on the server and it showed it
>received a
>> single packet from the client and that's it.
>>
>> There is nothing in the logs on the client. In fact, they simply stop
>at
>> some point in the process. At first I attributed this to the root
>> filesystem being read-only but it continues after I move /var to a
>> separate file system. At some point it just stops writing records to
>the
>> syslog but I don't know if it's before or after the root filesystem
>is
>> remounted read-only.
>>
>> Many of the TAs also have identical workstations in their offices.
>None
>> of those machines seem to have this problem.  The TAs do tend to walk
>> away from the workstations w/o logging out. But I wrote a script to
>kill
>> off their sessions and it didn't help. I had it send me an email
>> whenever it killed somebody's session and it doesn't seem to be
>> correlated with that. In other words, sometimes machines go down even
>if
>> everyone who has used it has remembered to log out.
>>
>> I'm pretty desperate. Any ideas?
>>
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>
>-- 
>Todd
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-- 
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