Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat How to find the process which is caused system hung state? Post 302705637 by aashish.sharma8 on Tuesday 25th of September 2012 09:59:58 AM
Old 09-25-2012
Hi Naveen,
I am not very familiar with swap but I think top or topas command's will give you the process which is taking most of the CPU
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

system hung

I installed sco unix v 5.0.5 in the hp server lc 2000 HD size 27gb & ram 256 , used micro focus cobol for unix , aplication system bank , the problem is the system hung 2 or 3 times a day will you pls. give me the solution. thanks talib alsaadi :( (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: talib alsaadi
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SCO Openserver 5.0.7 Hung process problem

Hi guys I installed this new server with 5.0.7 openserver and i'm getting a lot of this process, if a stop and restart the printer spooler they go away but after a few minutes they appear again.This is how it looks like. root 372 615 0 - - 00:00:00 <defunct> root ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: josramon
0 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Monitoring for a hung process

A coworker has a shell script that runs from a scheduler at the 3am. The shell script runs sqlplus passing in a sql statement, which generate a file. This is done 21 times for 21 different sql statements. Recently, one of the sqlplus processes got hung. Is there a way to monitor how long the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: prismtx
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

zombie processes and hung process termination

Is there a way I can run a command that will run in the kernel or in the memory and automatically kill certain scripts if they get to <defunct> processes, without having to be monitoring the server manually? I have a Perl script which runs for 20k members and normally does not have any problems,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ukndoit
2 Replies

5. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

Check hung process and restart

Hi all I have networker running on a RHEL 5.7 and over time it hangs. So the solution backup team proposed is to check if the process is hung, to stop and start it. Unfortunately for me, the rc script only allows three commands, start, stop and status (no restart option) so I managed to set... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: hedkandi
15 Replies

6. BSD

Process remians in Running state causing other similar process to sleep and results to system hang

Hi Experts, I am facing one problem here which is one process always stuck in running state which causes the other similar process to sleep state . This causes my system in hanged state. On doing cat /proc/<pid>wchan showing the "__init_begin" in the output. Can you please help me here... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: naveeng
0 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Process remians in Running state causing other similar process to sleep and results to system hang

Hi Experts, I am facing one problem here which is one process always stuck in running state which causes the other similar process to sleep state . This causes my system in hanged state. On doing cat /proc/<pid>wchan showing the "__init_begin" in the output. Can you please help me here... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: naveeng
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Process remians in Running state causing other similar process to sleep and results to system hang

Hi Experts, I am facing one problem here which is one process always stuck in running state which causes the other similar process to sleep state . This causes my system in hanged state. On doing cat /proc/<pid>wchan showing the "__init_begin" in the output. Can you please help me here... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: naveeng
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to check if the process is Hung?

I wish to monitor if my Tomcat process if Running, Hung, or Shutdown. I cannot use any third party monitoring tools so i decided to use one of these to test if the tomcat server is responding or not . 1. nslookup 2. telnet 3. ps The reason I do not use wget / curl is because it will... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
2 Replies

10. Infrastructure Monitoring

Can HPOV monitor server hung state ?

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
INIT(8) 						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						   INIT(8)

NAME
init -- process control initialization SYNOPSIS
init DESCRIPTION
The init program is the last stage of the boot process. It normally runs the automatic reboot sequence as described in reboot(8), and if this succeeds, begins multi-user operation. If the reboot scripts fail, init commences single user operation by giving the super-user a shell on the console. The init program may be passed parameters from the boot program to prevent the system from going multi-user and to instead execute a single user shell without starting the normal daemons. The system is then quiescent for maintenance work and may later be made to go to multi-user by exiting the single-user shell (with ^D). This causes init to run the /etc/rc start up command file in fastboot mode (skipping disk checks). If the console entry in the ttys(5) file is marked ``insecure'', then init will require that the superuser password be entered before the system will start a single-user shell. The password check is skipped if the console is marked as ``secure''. The kernel runs with four different levels of security. Any superuser process can raise the security level, but only init can lower it. Security levels are defined as follows: -1 Permanently insecure mode - always run system in level 0 mode. 0 Insecure mode - immutable and append-only flags may be turned off. All devices may be read or written subject to their permissions. 1 Secure mode - immutable and append-only flags may not be changed; disks for mounted filesystems, /dev/mem, and /dev/kmem are read-only. The settimeofday(2) system call can only advance the time. 2 Highly secure mode - same as secure mode, plus disks are always read-only whether mounted or not. This level precludes tampering with filesystems by unmounting them, but also inhibits running newfs(8) while the system is multi-user. Normally, the system runs in level 0 mode while single user and in level 1 mode while multiuser. If the level 2 mode is desired while run- ning multiuser, it can be set in the startup script /etc/rc using sysctl(8). If it is desired to run the system in level 0 mode while multi- user, the administrator must build a kernel with the variable securelevel defined in the file /sys/compile/MACHINE/param.c and initialize it to -1. In multi-user operation, init maintains processes for the terminal ports found in the file ttys(5). Init reads this file, and executes the command found in the second field. This command is usually getty(8); getty opens and initializes the tty line and executes the login pro- gram. The login program, when a valid user logs in, executes a shell for that user. When this shell dies, either because the user logged out or an abnormal termination occurred (a signal), the init program wakes up, deletes the user from the utmp(5) file of current users and records the logout in the wtmp file. The cycle is then restarted by init executing a new getty for the line. Line status (on, off, secure, getty, or window information) may be changed in the ttys file without a reboot by sending the signal SIGHUP to init with the command ``kill -s HUP 1''. On receipt of this signal, init re-reads the ttys file. When a line is turned off in ttys, init will send a SIGHUP signal to the controlling process for the session associated with the line. For any lines that were previously turned off in the ttys file and are now on, init executes a new getty to enable a new login. If the getty or window field for a line is changed, the change takes effect at the end of the current login session (e.g., the next time init starts a process on the line). If a line is commented out or deleted from ttys, init will not do anything at all to that line. However, it will complain that the relationship between lines in the ttys file and records in the utmp file is out of sync, so this practice is not recommended. Init will terminate multi-user operations and resume single-user mode if sent a terminate (TERM) signal, for example, ``kill -s TERM 1''. If there are processes outstanding that are deadlocked (because of hardware or software failure), init will not wait for them all to die (which might take forever), but will time out after 30 seconds and print a warning message. Init will cease creating new getty's and allow the system to slowly die away, if it is sent a terminal stop (TSTP) signal, i.e. ``kill -s TSTP 1''. A later hangup will resume full multi-user operations, or a terminate will start a single user shell. This hook is used by reboot(8) and halt(8). The role of init is so critical that if it dies, the system will reboot itself automatically. If, at bootstrap time, the init process cannot be located, the system will panic with the message ``panic: "init died (signal %d, exit %d)''. DIAGNOSTICS
getty repeating too quickly on port %s, sleeping A process being started to service a line is exiting quickly each time it is started. This is often caused by a ringing or noisy terminal line. Init will sleep for 10 seconds, then continue trying to start the process. some processes would not die; ps axl advised. A process is hung and could not be killed when the system was shutting down. This condition is usually caused by a process that is stuck in a device driver because of a persistent device error condition. FILES
/dev/console System console device. /dev/tty* Terminal ports found in ttys. /var/run/utmp Record of Current users on the system. /var/log/wtmp Record of all logins and logouts. /etc/ttys The terminal initialization information file. /etc/rc System startup commands. SEE ALSO
login(1), kill(1), sh(1), ttys(5), crash(8), getty(8), rc(8), reboot(8), halt(8), shutdown(8) HISTORY
A init command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BUGS
Systems without sysctl behave as though they have security level -1. 4th Berkeley Distribution May 26, 1995 4th Berkeley Distribution
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:51 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy