[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [Xen-users] Dom0 crashes without logging lately on Debian Stretch with Xen 4.8
On 11/6/18 7:10 PM, John Naggets wrote:
Thanks to both of you for your detailed information. So as you both do
not have the intel-microcode package installed it can't be that the
issue. I do not make use of that package either myself. So what is
left? Well it looks like I am running on older hardware, at least 5
years old hardware and who knows if this has some kind of influence.
It might be interesting to get in touch with the hardware manufacturer
(DELL?) and ask them if they have other customers with this issue. The
only problem here is that as soon as you mention Debian they will stop
listening to you :( If I remember correctly they only take support
cases for supported commercial Linux distributions which basically
boils down to RHEL and SLES... Maybe the DELL forums would be a better
alternative. I would definitely recommend filling a bug issue with
Debian and maybe even Xen... If you have some kind of stack trace that
would also be interesting to see.
Hi all.
We also use XEN on Debian Strech here is the info.
Server 1: DELL T330 4 CPU about 2.5 years with Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU
E3-1220 v5 @ 3.00GHz
Latest XEN package from debian intel-microcode 3.20180807a.1~deb9u1 with
kernel 4.9.110-3+deb9u6, Domu with a mix of strech and jessie with
kernels 3.16.59-1 and 4.9.110-3+deb9u6.
This one is stable.
Server 2. DELL R740 6 months old with Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6132 CPU @
2.60GHz
Latest XEN package from debian intel-microcode (3.20180807a.1~deb9u1)
with kernel 4.9.110-3+deb9u4, Domu with a mix of strech and jessie with
kernels 3.16.59-1 and 4.9.110-3+deb9u6.
This one is stable.
Server 3. LENOVO RD650 about 4 years old with Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU
E5-2650 v3 @ 2.30GHz with kernel 4.9.110-3+deb9u4
Latest XEN package from debian intel-microcode 3.20180703.2~deb9u1, Domu
with a mix of strech and jessie with kernels 3.16.59-1 and
4.9.110-3+deb9u6 and Centos kernel 4.10.
This one is stable.
On all XEN Dom0 server have we put
GRUB_CMDLINE_XEN_DEFAULT="dom0_mem=2048M,max:2048M" and sched-credit to
512 on dom0.
xl sched-credit
Name ID Weight Cap
Domain-0 0 512 0
Best regards Johnny
J.
On Tue, Nov 6, 2018 at 9:37 AM Roalt Zijlstra | webpower
<roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi John,
Yes, we are using PV only and we only run Debian Linux on the
servers. We still have some DomU Jessie servers running with the
stock kernel. We did update our Dells to the latest firmware so it
does include more recent intel microcode with that. But on Debian
we did not yet enable the intel-firmware yet, since we had so much
instability and so much parameters that could be the culprit, we
did not want to add another.
If your server is very busy, I think the chance to have a crash is
higher. We have seen crashes on our active MySQL databases whereas
the slave MySQL database server did not crash that quickly,
however after using the slave MySQL database as primary database
for a while (because we were debugging the crashed master
database) it could very well happen that the slave would crash too.
We have done tests with downgrading firmware of Dell (which also
means using an older intel microcode) but that did not help. So
having the latest firmware is okay.
We are now testing a few scenarios:
* one server with an older kernel (4.9.0-4-amd64), with DomU
3.16 kernel, which runs for 16 days now
* one server with the updated -kernel (4.9.0-8-amd64), with
DomU 3.16 kernel, which runs for 28 days now surprisingly
* one server with the updated -kernel (4.9.0-8-amd64), and all
DomUs on the backported 4.9 kernel.
It all doesn't really make much sense. We do have the expectation
that the older kernel will keep on running and that the 4.9 DomUs
will help to keep the servers alive.
We have tested with 4.14 and 4.16 kernels (from backports) but
that did not make a difference in stability.
Best regards,
[Naam] Roalt Zijlstra
Teamleader Infra & Deliverability
[Email] roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx>
[Phone] +31 342 423 262
[Skype] roalt.zijlstra
[Phone] https://www.webpower-group.com
<https://www.webpower-group.com/>
[Webpower] <https://www.webpower-group.com/>
Facebook <https://www.facebook.com/webpower.marketingautomation/>
Twitter <https://twitter.com/webpower> Linkedin
<https://www.linkedin.com/company/36782/>
Barcelona | Barneveld | Beijing | Chengdu | Guangzhou
Hamburg | Shanghai | Shenzhen | Stockholm
<https://webpower.nl/event/kennissessies/?utm_source=GML&utm_medium=EMAIL&utm_campaign=EVENT&utm_term=KNOWLDGS&utm_content=NL>
Op ma 5 nov. 2018 om 18:24 schreef John Naggets
<hostingnuggets@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:hostingnuggets@xxxxxxxxx>>:
It could be as you mention... your domU are they PV? I am
using paravirtualization exclusively and on this specific
server have the following CPU:
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5645 @ 2.40GHz
Do you have the intel-microcode Debian package from the
non-free repo installed on your servers? I currently don't...
J.
On Mon, Nov 5, 2018 at 3:04 PM Roalt Zijlstra | webpower
<roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi John,
It could very well be that it is also restricted to some
CPUs, but I am inclinded to believe that the used DomU
kernels can influence stability. We did have a pretty
busy SSL offloader running on a 3.16 kernel, which might
have caused the crashes.
Just for reference, we have the following two CPUs causing
us trouble, but I am not sure if it matters.
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2640 0 @ 2.50GHz
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 v3 @ 2.30GHz
Roalt
Op ma 5 nov. 2018 om 10:45 schreef John Naggets
<hostingnuggets@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:hostingnuggets@xxxxxxxxx>>:
Hi,
Thanks for your feedback. I was wondering because I
have just upgraded a Debian 9 server to the latest
kernel with the latest Xen packages from the official
Debian repo. The only difference is that I have an
older IBM server which is already ~7 years old patched
with the latest BIOS/UEFI and so far so good no crash.
The uptime is 6 days for now. Here are the details
about my kernel and xen packages.
ii xen-hypervisor-4.8-amd64
4.8.4+xsa273+shim4.10.1+xsa273-1+deb9u10 amd64
Xen Hypervisor on AMD64
ii linux-image-4.9.0-8-amd64 4.9.110-3+deb9u6
amd64 Linux 4.9 for 64-bit PCs
Regards,
J.
On Fri, Nov 2, 2018 at 7:57 PM Volker Janzen
<volker@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi John,
the problem is that I cannot provide any metrics
or logfiles showing an error. I can only tell that
dom0 is rebooting for a reason that is not logged.
I have no physical access to the server. I got one
other report about this kind of issue.
My assumption the cause are the backported patches
is based on the current 16 day uptime. 16 days ago
the server rebooted every 3-5 days. It won’t be a
useful bug report from my point of view.
The other thing is that my two servers are now
running upstream Xen and kernel and I might not go
back to both old versions in Debian stretch. The
other server had always running upstream versions
and had never a problem, that’s why I updated the
other, too.
Best regards
Volker
Am 02.11.2018 um 17:23 schrieb John Naggets
<hostingnuggets@xxxxxxxxx
<mailto:hostingnuggets@xxxxxxxxx>>:
I was wondering if any of you guys reported this
bug/issue/problem back to the Debian community?
For example on their bugs.debian org web site?
On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 1:47 PM Volker Janzen
<volker@xxxxxxxxxx <mailto:volker@xxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi,
I had these crash problems with the Xen
version in Debian stretch, too. After 3 to 7
days the Xen server rebooted without log
entry or something else to observe. The
problems started when the first patches were
applied by Debian. Some updates made it
better, the last worse again. I checked hard
drives, RAM and closely monitored metrics
what might be the cause.
My solution after no longer suspecting a
hardware fault: build upstream Xen 4.11 for
Debian stretch. I am currently running this
setup with my own build of kernel 4.19. The
machines are now working stable again.
Volker
Am 29.10.2018 um 13:13 schrieb Roalt Zijlstra
| webpower <roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:roalt.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxxxx>>:
Hi there,
Ever since all the Meltdown and Spectre
kernel updates and possibly also Xen 4.8
updates, we experience crashes of the Dom0
just out of the blue. Sometimes after 1 day,
sometimes after a few days or even 14 days,
completely random.
We have two Dell P730 servers and two Dell
P720 servers with this behaviour. One thing
is that we updated these machine to the
latest available firmware, because that is
the most secure way. Then we installed
Debian Stretch with Xen 4.8 support
We have done serveral installs and 4 servers
seem to crash pretty fast and other don't.
In the end we think that we can lead it back
to the xen-4.8.4-pre version being stable
and the xen-4.8.5-pre being unstable. This
was kinda independent of the kernel that we
were using 4.14 or 4.9.0-8-amd64. This is
off course all Debian package numbering.
As last resort we updated on one server all
DomU kernels of our Jessie servers on this
Dom0 to 4.9.0 from backports instead of the
3.16 kernel. For now that seems to work, but
the crashes are random so it could happen
any time again. The idea is that these
kernels are completely spectre& meltdown
unaware and might cause trouble in Xen
kernel support. I am not sure if this is
true at all, but we are pretty lost what the
actual cause is.
We also tested with CentOS and we also had
these crashes there with certain
combinations of kernel/Xen. The most recent
updates seem to be more stable tough. The
most frustrating part is the there is
absolutely no logs to be found. No kernel
oops or what.. the server just resets and
boots again.
Are there others experiencing problems like
this? Do you see more frequent server/kernel
crashes on production servers?
Best regards,
Roalt Zijlstra
_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-users
_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-users
_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-users
_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-users
_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-users
_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-users
|