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Red Hat Enterprise Linux Troubleshooting Guide

You're reading from   Red Hat Enterprise Linux Troubleshooting Guide Identify, capture and resolve common issues faced by Red Hat Enterprise Linux administrators using best practices and advanced troubleshooting techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785283550
Length 458 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Benjamin Cane Benjamin Cane
Author Profile Icon Benjamin Cane
Benjamin Cane
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Troubleshooting Best Practices 2. Troubleshooting Commands and Sources of Useful Information FREE CHAPTER 3. Troubleshooting a Web Application 4. Troubleshooting Performance Issues 5. Network Troubleshooting 6. Diagnosing and Correcting Firewall Issues 7. Filesystem Errors and Recovery 8. Hardware Troubleshooting 9. Using System Tools to Troubleshoot Applications 10. Understanding Linux User and Kernel Limits 11. Recovering from Common Failures 12. Root Cause Analysis of an Unexpected Reboot Index

Investigating the filesystem being full

Earlier, we noticed that the filesystem was 100 percent full. Unfortunately, the version of sysstat we have installed doesn't capture disk space usage. A useful thing to identify is when the filesystem filled up as compared to when our run queue started to increase:

Jul  5 01:48:01 localhost auditd[560]: Audit daemon is low on disk space for logging
Jul  5 01:48:01 localhost auditd[560]: Audit daemon is suspending logging due to low disk space.

From the log messages we saw earlier, we could see the auditd process identified the low disk space at 01:48. This is extremely close to the time our run queue spike was seen.

This is building towards a hypothesis that the problem's root cause was a filesystem filling up, which caused a process to either launch many CPU intensive tasks or block the CPU for other tasks.

While this is a sound theory, we have to prove it to be true. One way we can get closer to proving this is to identify what is utilizing...

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