On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 12:33 PM, PJ <pauljerome at gmail.com> wrote: > This may or may not be CentOS related, but am out of ideas at this > point and wanted to bounce this off the list. > > I'm running a CentOS 5.5 server, running the latest kernel 2.6.18-194.32.1.el5. > > Almost everyday around 3:30 AM the server completely locks up and has > to be power cycled before it will come back online. > (this means someone hat to wake up and reboot the server, oh how I > love being an internet janitor! :) > > Smells like a hardware issue to me too, but I went through all of the > dell diagnostics, updated the firmware, everything checks out as being > okay, RAID, disks, RAM, etc... Spent an hour on the phone with a Dell > tech. No hardware issues, at least that we were able to find. > > There are no cron jobs that run at 3:30, no backups, the server has a > load of 0, nothing is scheduled around that time... > > The only crontab entry at all is "*/5 * * * * wget -q > www.websitedomain.com/cron.php >/dev/null 2>&1" > They are running Magento for commerce purposes and this runs every 5 minutes. > > Why does the server only lockup around 3:30 AM? Because it's knows I > am fast asleep? > > I was able to pull this from /var/log/messages, this happens just > seconds before locking up completely... > > Mar 8 03:33:18 web1 kernel: INFO: task wget:13608 blocked for more > than 120 seconds. > Mar 8 03:33:19 web1 kernel: "echo 0 > > /proc/sys/kernel/hung_task_timeout_secs" disables this message. > Mar 8 03:33:19 web1 kernel: wget D ffff810001004420 0 > 13608 13607 (NOTLB) > Mar 8 03:33:19 web1 kernel: ffff81007bc7bc78 0000000000000086 > ffff81007bc7bd88 ffff81000100d3f8 > Mar 8 03:33:19 web1 kernel: ffff81007bc7bbf0 0000000000000007 > ffff8100849db0c0 ffffffff80308b60 > Mar 8 03:33:19 web1 kernel: 00013a2964cdf439 0000000000003237 > ffff8100849db2a8 0000000064c82eae > Mar 8 03:33:19 web1 kernel: Call Trace: > Mar 8 03:33:20 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff80063c6f>] > __mutex_lock_slowpath+0x60/0x9b > Mar 8 03:33:20 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff80063cb9>] .text.lock.mutex+0xf/0x14 > Mar 8 03:33:20 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff8000cf82>] do_lookup+0x90/0x1e6 > Mar 8 03:33:20 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff8000a29c>] __link_path_walk+0xa01/0xf5b > Mar 8 03:33:20 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff8000ea4b>] link_path_walk+0x42/0xb2 > Mar 8 03:33:20 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff8000cd72>] do_path_lookup+0x275/0x2f1 > Mar 8 03:33:23 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff80012851>] getname+0x15b/0x1c2 > Mar 8 03:33:23 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff800239d1>] __user_walk_fd+0x37/0x4c > Mar 8 03:33:23 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff80028905>] vfs_stat_fd+0x1b/0x4a > Mar 8 03:33:23 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff80023703>] sys_newstat+0x19/0x31 > Mar 8 03:33:23 web1 kernel: [<ffffffff8005d116>] system_call+0x7e/0x83 > > If anyone has some advice on where to go from here it would be greatly > appreciated. > > Thanks in advance. > > -- > PJF > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > Have you tried disabling the cron job you think is at fault to see if the lock up goes away? Also, have you checked all the users' crontabs? Boris.