Subject: remove
To: None <netbsd-help@NetBSD.org>
From: sosoysq <sosoysq@126.com>
List: netbsd-help
Date: 09/11/2007 08:46:04
remove
-----Original Message-----
From: netbsd-help-owner@NetBSD.org [mailto:netbsd-help-owner@NetBSD.org] On
Behalf Of Manuel Bouyer
Sent: 2007 09 11 4:03
To: Lars Friend
Cc: netbsd-help@NetBSD.org
Subject: Re: Strange network hang on Poweredge 860
On Mon, Sep 10, 2007 at 02:34:02PM -0400, Lars Friend wrote:
> Hello all,
> I've been experiencing a very strange mode of failure which has me
> scratching my head so I figured I'd ask here to see if anybody had seen
> something like this before.
>
> I have installed NetBSD 3.1 on a brand new Dell PowerEdge 860
> system (dual core P4 Xeon, 4GB ram, 2 SATA drives in software RAID using
> raidframe raid1).
>
> This system is in line to (once stable) replace an aging and slow
> box
> to take over POP, SMTP, DHCP, and secure login services for a decent
> sized pool of users. I cloned the old system from backups (using
restore),
> put the GENERIC.MP kernel in place, and changed its hostname and IP.
> I also turned of dhcpd (so as not to stomp the live server), and let
> it run for a few
> weeks (logging in and using it from time to time, testing out patches and
> doing general system stuff). It was rock solid and very stable.
>
> So, we replaced the old system with our fancy new one, and four
> hours
> into operation, things get weird. The system is still running,
> everything seems okay,
> nothing unexpected or unpleasant in syslog, but the NIC is kaput. It
> sees link, seems to be
> okay, but it won't accept or make connections, pings, or any other
> network traffic.
> [..]
maybe nmbcluster is too low ? look at netstat -m/vmstat -m when
this happens. You can also try to rebuild a kernel with
options NMBCLUSTERS=8192
and see how it goes. You may also want to try a netbsd-3 kernel, there
has been one pullup to if_bge.c since netbsd-3-1-RELEASE
--
Manuel Bouyer <bouyer@antioche.eu.org>
NetBSD: 26 ans d'experience feront toujours la difference
--