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<blockquote cite="mid20051103230703.6A9A573B61@hormel.redhat.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">On Thu, Nov 03, 2005 at 02:32:50PM -0500, Matt Roth wrote:
</pre>
<blockquote type="cite">
<pre wrap="">
I am receiving some boot messages on my Fedora Core 3 machine that
concern me and I would like your help in identifying whether they are
actual problems or if they can be safely ignored. I captured the
messages by using 'Shift+Page Up' to page through the scroll buffer
prior to logging in and typing what I saw into an editor on another
machine. I looked for a way to capture these boot messages to file, but
I couldn't find one. Does anyone know of a way to do this?
</pre>
</blockquote>
<pre wrap=""><!---->get a hold of: system-logviewer-0.9.11-1
which was left out of FC4 but is in FC3. Also look in:
/var/log/boot.log
demsg will also list boot messages after you boot but has a limited
buffer.
</pre>
</blockquote>
I am aware of the boot.log and dmesg. It looks like most, if not all,
of the information from the boot sequence is available through them. I
was just wondering if there is an easier way to obtain the actual
console output of the boot sequence than digging through multiple
sources and piecing it together.<br>
<br>
Does system-logviewer perform this function?<br>
<blockquote cite="mid20051103230703.6A9A573B61@hormel.redhat.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">I have seen those cache messages before but don't know what they mean
and have ignored them May be a mistake. I guess these are SATA
drives. If they are your SATA configuration in the BIOS may be in
error.
</pre>
</blockquote>
They are two SCSI drives configured in a RAID 1 (mirrored). The
controller is a PERC 4e/Si RAID controller. <br>
<blockquote cite="mid20051103230703.6A9A573B61@hormel.redhat.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Does your NFS server respond immediately after you finish booting.If
not there may be a response timeout occurring. You do have nfs and
nfslock running on you server?
</pre>
</blockquote>
Yes and yes. I can manually mount the NFS server immediately after
logging in and both nfsd and lockd are running on the NFS server.<br>
<blockquote cite="mid20051103230703.6A9A573B61@hormel.redhat.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">smartd failures ususally come from misconfiguration of the conf file.
</pre>
</blockquote>
I will look into either disabling smartd or configuring it correctly.<br>
<br>
Thank you for your response,<br>
<br>
Matthew Roth<br>
InterMedia Marketing Solutions<br>
Software Engineer and Systems Developer<br>
<blockquote cite="mid20051103230703.6A9A573B61@hormel.redhat.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap=""></pre>
<blockquote type="cite">
<pre wrap="">==================================================
Booting 'Fedora Core (2.6.12-1.1376_FC3smp)'
kernel direct mapping tables upto ffff810100000000 @8000-c000
root (hd0,1)
Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83
kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.12-1.1376_FC3smp ro root=LABEL=/ quiet
[Linux-bzImage, setup=0x1e00, size=0x1a57fa]
initrd /initrd-2.6.12-1.1376_FC3smp.img
[Linux-initrd @ 0x37f07000, 0xe81c0 bytes]
.
Decompressing Linux...done.
Booting the kernel.
Red Hat nash version 4.1.18.1 starting
sda: asking for cache data failed
sda: assuming drive cache: write through
sda: asking for cache data failed
sda: assuming drive cache: write through
INIT: version 2.85 booting
Setting default font (latarcyrheb-sun16): [ OK ]
Welcome to Fedora Core
Press 'I' to enter interactive startup.
Starting udev: [ OK ]
Initializing hardware... storage network audio done [ OK ]
Configuring kernel parameters: [ OK ]
Setting clock (utc): Thu Nov 3 10:47:11 EST 2005 [ OK ]
Loading default keymap (us): [ OK ]
Setting hostname immlx16.imm1: [ OK ]
Checking root filesystem
/: clean, 28314/656000 files, 120710/1311297 blocks
[ OK ]
Remounting root filesystem in read-write mode: [ OK ]
Setting up Logical Volume Management: [ OK ]
Checking filesystems
/boot: clean, 40/32256 files, 20415/128520 blocks
/home: clean, 27/656000 files, 31389/1311297 blocks
/usr: clean, 179268/1310720 files, 1154593/2620595 blocks
/var: clean, 3815/6045696 files, 745141/12080872 blocks
[ OK ]
Mounting local filesystems: [ OK ]
Enabling local filesystem quotas: [ OK ]
Enabling swap space: [ OK ]
INIT: Entering runlevel: 3
Entering non-interactive startup
Starting sysstat: [ OK ]
Starting etherfabric [ OK ]
Checking for new hardware [ OK ]
Starting pcmcia: [ OK ]
Setting network parameters: [ OK ]
Bringing up loopback interface: [ OK ]
Bringing up eth2: [ OK ]
Bringing up eth3: [ OK ]
Starting system logger: [ OK ]
Starting kernel logger: [ OK ]
Starting irqbalance: [ OK ]
Starting portmap: [ OK ]
Starting NFS statd: [ OK ]
Starting RPC idmapd: [ OK ]
Mounting NFS filesystems: mount to NFS server 'XXX.XXX.XX.XX' failed:
server is
down.
[FAILED]
Mounting other filesystems: [ OK ]
Starting lm_sensors: [ OK ]
Starting automount: No Mountpoints Defined [ OK ]
Starting nifd...
Starting mDNSResponder... [ OK ]
Starting smartd: [FAILED]
Starting acpi daemon: [ OK ]
Starting cups: [ OK ]
Starting sshd: [ OK ]
ip_tables: (C) 2000-2002 Netfilter core team
Starting xinetd: [ OK ]
Starting NFS services: [ OK ]
Starting NFS quotas: [ OK ]
Starting NFS daemon: [ OK ]
Starting NFS mountd: [ OK ]
Starting vsftpd for vsftpd: [ OK ]
Starting sendmail: [ OK ]
Starting sm-client: [ OK ]
Starting console mouse services: [ OK ]
/etc/rc3.d/S90crond: line 13: /usr/local/bin/rename.ps.info.log: No such
file or
directory
Starting crond: [ OK ]
Starting xfs: [ OK ]
Starting anacron: [ OK ]
Starting atd: [ OK ]
Starting system message bus: [ OK ]
Starting cups-config-daemon: [ OK ]
Starting haldaemon: [ OK ]
==================================================
The messages that concern me are:
==========
sda: asking for cache data failed
sda: assuming drive cache: write through
sda: asking for cache data failed
sda: assuming drive cache: write through
----------
I have no idea what these mean, but they don't seem to cause any
problems with the operation of the machine. Can they be safely ignored
or should I try to resolve them (and if so, how)?
==========
Mounting NFS filesystems: mount to NFS server 'XXX.XXX.XX.XX' failed:
server is
down.
[FAILED]
----------
This is a strange one. The server (IP hidden for security) is up and
manually mounting it succeeds immediately after logging in. The mount
succeeds during boot about 5% of the time. Does anyone know what could
be causing it to fail the vast majority of the time?
==========
Starting smartd: [FAILED]
----------
Are there common causes for smartd failures? Should I just turn it off
or should I attempt to fix the configuration? The contents of my
smartd.conf file are as follows:
[root@immlx16 ~]# cat /etc/smartd.conf
/dev/sda -H -m <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:root@localhost.localdomain">root@localhost.localdomain</a>
==========
/etc/rc3.d/S90crond: line 13: /usr/local/bin/rename.ps.info.log: No such
file or
directory
Starting crond: [ OK ]
----------
A script was missing and this problem has been resolved.
==========
If you need any more information to help me with a particular problem,
please don't hesitate to ask. I will be happy to provide it.
</pre>
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