Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2016 16:45:42 -0800 From: Adrian Chadd <adrian.chadd@gmail.com> To: Scott Otis <scott.otis@tandemcal.com> Cc: "freebsd-stable@freebsd.org" <freebsd-stable@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: 10.2 Release seems to be crashing on Azure with "Standard DS" VM sizes Message-ID: <CAJ-Vmomkj0owHn8DbwBzf6oNZnMbLhE9V-PZPHz0d__mq3RRcQ@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <DE61DDC3EE1DBD4DB1CE68DAB471A283015FF04419@evt01fevwexa001> References: <DE61DDC3EE1DBD4DB1CE68DAB471A283015FF04419@evt01fevwexa001>
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hiya, how much RAM does the VM have? Yes, you need to either run dumpon or reboot once you update /etc/rc.conf . -a On 5 February 2016 at 13:55, Scott Otis <scott.otis@tandemcal.com> wrote: > Been trying to get a FreeBSD VM server running on Azure on a "Standard DS= " size VM (so I have access to SSD storage for PostgreSQL). The "Standard = DS" series of VMs also have faster/newer CPUs than the original "Standard A= " series of VMs. I am using the image of FreeBSD from here: https://vmdepo= t.msopentech.com/Vhd/Show?vhdId=3D56718&version=3D61117 . After setting up= the VM it started rebooting every hour or so. Initially I thought this wa= s an Azure issue and Azure was forcibly rebooting the VM because it wasn't = getting health reports back. But I don't' believe this is the case anymore= and I think FreeBSD is crashing. (Note: I have setup a FreeBSD VM with a = "Standard A" series VM and that seems to be running fine - though it looks = like it might have crashed after about 38 hours which is much better than c= rashing after 1 hour). > > Here is the "last" log from the last two days: > > [--redacted--] pts/2 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 21:10 still logged = in > [--redacted--] pts/1 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 21:10 still logged = in > [--redacted--] pts/0 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 20:58 - 21:10 (00:12= ) > boot time Fri Feb 5 20:53 > [--redacted--] pts/1 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 04:59 - crash (15:54= ) > [--redacted--] pts/0 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 04:59 - 04:59 (00:00= ) > boot time Fri Feb 5 04:41 > boot time Fri Feb 5 02:16 > [--redacted--] pts/1 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 00:36 - crash (01:40= ) > [--redacted--] pts/0 [--redacted--] Fri Feb 5 00:36 - 00:36 (00:00= ) > boot time Fri Feb 5 00:29 > shutdown time Thu Feb 4 09:33 > boot time Thu Feb 4 08:47 > [--redacted--] pts/0 [--redacted--] Thu Feb 4 07:25 - crash (01:21= ) > boot time Thu Feb 4 07:00 > boot time Thu Feb 4 05:03 > boot time Thu Feb 4 02:45 > [--redacted--] pts/0 [--redacted--] Thu Feb 4 01:08 - crash (01:36= ) > boot time Thu Feb 4 00:58 > > There are boot times without previous shutdown times - and there is that = "crash" text (which is why I'm thinking it is a crash). > > It looks by default the OS is setup to NOT save crash dumps > > > sudo dumpon -v -l > > kernel dumps on /dev/null > > > If that is the case - do I add this to /etc/rc.conf? > > > > dumpdev=3D"AUTO" > > dumpdir=3D"/var/crash" > > > > Is there anything I need to adjust there? > > Does that only take affect after a reboot? > > Do I need to set anything with dumpon(8)? > > > > Here is the info on the swapfile: > > > > sudo swapinfo -h > > Device 512-blocks Used Avail Capacity > > /dev/gpt/swapfs 2097152 0B 1.0G 0% > > > > Is that enough space for a kernel crash dump? > > > > Thanks for all your help with this. > > Regards, > > Scott Otis > CTO & Co-Founder > Tandem > www.tandemcal.com<http://www.tandemcal.com/> > > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list > https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
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