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Full Discussion: Network related issues
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Network related issues Post 303002968 by rbatte1 on Wednesday 6th of September 2017 05:33:29 AM
Old 09-06-2017
Some wild guesses:-
  • Loss of access to DNS server (slow reverse IP lookup for auditing, so slow login or application)
  • Database locks - hugely dependant on your application
  • Missing database index causing full table scans
  • Poor data queries, e.g. get all records from the database then check each in turn on criteria rather than building the condition into the query
  • Database logs files filling and flushing too slowly
  • Exhausting real memory causing paging (potentially DB consuming too much real memory)
  • Network speed conflict, e.g. if NIC is 10M-half and switch is 100M-full, it will work, but any file transfer will cripple it with lots of dropped packets.
  • IO issues, especially with NFS or an HA cluster if you fail over
  • Scheduled work, e.g. current stock summary
  • Ad-hoc jobs, e.g. current stock summary
  • Resources stealing by another LPAR if the definitions allow it
  • Large write volume to direct disk (e.g. local) rather than cached disk (RAID or SAN etc.)
  • High NFS contention especially with other seemingly unrelated servers

You can see it is a very very VERY wide spread of options so far - and the list is a long way from being exhaustive. You need to be a fair bit more explicit about what you have (including OS) what goes slow, what's happening at the time, what dependencies you have with other servers.



Robin
 

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yppush(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 yppush(8)

NAME
yppush - force propagation of a changed Network Information Service (NIS) map SYNOPSIS
yppush [-d domain] [-v] mapname OPTIONS
Specify a domain. Verbose. This causes messages to be printed when each server is called, and for each response. Without this option, only error messages are printed. DESCRIPTION
The yppush command copies a new version of a Network Information Service (NIS) map from the master NIS server to the slave NIS servers. It is normally run only on the master NIS server by the make utility accessing the /var/yp/Makefile after the master NIS databases have been changed. When invoked, yppush first constructs a list of NIS server hosts by reading the NIS map ypservers within the domain. Keys within the map ypservers are the ASCII names of the machines on which the NIS servers run. A transfer map request is sent to the NIS server at each host, along with the information needed by the transfer agent (the program which actually moves the map) to call back the yppush command. When the attempt has completed (successfully or not), and the transfer agent has sent yppush a status message, the results can be printed to stdout. Messages are also printed when a transfer is not possible, for instance when the request message is undeliverable, or when the timeout period on responses has expired. Refer to ypfiles(4) and ypserv(8) for an overview of NIS. RESTRICTIONS
In the current implementation (version 2 NIS protocol), the transfer agent is ypxfr, which is started by the ypserv program. If yppush detects that it is speaking to a version 1 NIS protocol server, it uses the older protocol, sending a version 1 YPPROC_GET request and issues a message to that effect. Unfortunately, there is no way of knowing if or when the map transfer was performed for version 1 servers. The yppush command prints a message saying that an old-style message has been sent. The system administrator should later check to see that the transfer has actually taken place. ERRORS
Map xxx no such map in server's domain -- using ypservers Explanation: This is an informational message that indicates that the yppush command will push the maps to all servers listed in the ypservers map. FILES
SEE ALSO
Commands: ypserv(8), ypxfr(8) Files: ypfiles(4) yppush(8)
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