10-05-2006
Searching before posting may be helpful - and if you post, post what OS and version you are using.
Found the following by searching:
clear close_wait status
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. HP-UX
So my server was hung when I came in this morning. It was responding to pings, but the console and telnet sessions would not respond. There was no disk activity. The display said FA1F which I discovered that the "A" represents a high CPU load. I tired several things to get it going but was forced... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: biznatch
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2. Solaris
Hi folks.
I have a problem that I need to remove CLOSE_WAIT connections.
On AIX version 5.x, I can use rmsock command.
Is there a similar command on Solaris ? Is there an other solution for this situation ?
Thanks. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Livio
6 Replies
3. Solaris
Hi,
Occasionally I am getting the port state in CLOSE_WAIT for long time in the solaris server. I am not sure is it application problem or not. Because we are using port 9009 for Tomcat process in our web application, some time when I start the application, the port 9009 is in CLOSE_WAIT... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mgmk.84
2 Replies
4. HP-UX
Our network administrators implemented some sort of check to kill idle sessions and now burden is on us to run some sort of keep alive. Client based keep alive doesn't do a very good job. I have same issue with ssh. Does solution 2 provided above apply for ssh sessions also? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: yoda9691
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5. Solaris
I'm not to sure how to go about this questions, so I will just ask it and then get criticized. How many Established connections should a V440 be able to support? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: adelsin
4 Replies
6. Red Hat
Hi,
I am running JBOSS 6 ona RHEL5 server put it continuously crashes due to the number of CLOSE_WAIT connections on port 8080.
How can I kill the several hundred CLOSE_WAIT connections without killing the actual live "LISTENING" connection?
R,
D. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Duffs22
2 Replies
7. AIX
I am using AIX 5.3, its a application server, i am giving the support of OS & Hardware only, now i want to check how many connections are connected to my server, means how many people using my server.:confused: (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: reply.ravi
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8. SuSE
Hi all
We've had an issue over the weekend when one of the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 hung and had to be rebooted. The thing is that I got the ticket alert for a FS exceeding its usage at about 22:41:49 PM on 23 March. I checked the dmesg, the messages log and the boot.msg but all I found... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hedkandi
1 Replies
9. Linux
Hi everyone,
Our Red Hat server hung yesterday, and I managed to log into the console and see the following message:
RIP: 0010: mwait_idle_with_hints+0x66/
0x67
RSP: 0018:ffffffff80457f40 EFLAGS: 00000046
RAX: 0000000000000010 RBX: ffff810c20075910 RCX: 0000000000000001
RDX:... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: badoshi
6 Replies
10. Infrastructure Monitoring
Hi,
We have Solaris-10 running on VMware (x86). It is being monitored by HP Openview. Sometimes when this server hungs, while ping still works, HPOpenview can't alert that server is down (which is actually unresponsive).
First symptom we see is, login failure. It will ask user name and after... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
7 Replies
fair(7) BSD Miscellaneous Information Manual fair(7)
NAME
fair -- simple TCP load balancing service
DESCRIPTION
fair is a load balancer for TCP connections. It can be used to distribute incoming connections for SMTP, HTTP or any other TCP service to
multiple hosts, distributing the load as evenly as possible.
fair consists of two daemons. The carrousel is the front-end; it keeps track of back-end hosts and their status, and forwards incoming con-
nections to the back-ends in such a way that the load is distributed fairly. The transponder runs on the back-end hosts, it registers with
the carrousel and sends it status information. The TCP connections forwarded by the carrousel are not sent to the transponder daemons but
are sent directly to the desired service running on the back-end host. Both daemons share a single configuration file.
EXAMPLES
The following example shows how to set up fair to service HTTP connections and to distribute them over back-ends in the 192.168.1.0/24 sub-
net.
The configuration file /etc/fair.conf contains the following:
WorkerService = http
BalancerService = http
AllowUDP = ^192.168.1.[0-9]+$
On www.example.com, the front-end server receiving the incoming HTTP connections, just run:
carrousel
On each of the back-ends run:
transponder www.example.com
SEE ALSO
carrousel(8), transponder(8), fair.conf(5)
Debian GNU/Linux June 1, 2019 Debian GNU/Linux