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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Network becomes slow and return fast only after restart network Post 302895303 by moshesa on Monday 31st of March 2014 05:59:38 AM
Old 03-31-2014
Network becomes slow and return fast only after restart network

Hi,
I have 2 machines in production environment:
1. redhat machine for application
2. DB machine (oracle)

The application doing a lot of small read&writes from and to the DB machine.

The problem is that after some few hours the network from the application to the DB becomes very slow and it returns to the normal only after:
Code:
service network restart

Before:
Code:
64 bytes from hostname.domain (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx): icmp_seq=1 ttl=63 time=7.81 ms
64 bytes from hostname.domain (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx): icmp_seq=2 ttl=63 time=5.88 ms
64 bytes from hostname.domain (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx): icmp_seq=3 ttl=63 time=7.81 ms

After restart network:
Code:
64 bytes from hostname.domain (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx): icmp_seq=84 ttl=63 time=0.135 ms
64 bytes from hostname.domain (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx): icmp_seq=85 ttl=63 time=0.171 ms
64 bytes from hostname.domain (xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx): icmp_seq=86 ttl=63 time=0.153 ms

What can it be?
How can i solve this strange behavior?

Thanks.
 

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GUARDS(1)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						 GUARDS(1)

NAME
guards - select from a list of files guarded by conditions SYNOPSIS
guards [--prefix=dir] [--path=dir2:dir2:...] [--default=0|1] [-v|--invert-match] [--list|--check] [--config=file] symbol ... DESCRIPTION
The script reads a configuration file that may contain so-called guards, file names, and comments, and writes those file names that satisfy all guards to standard output. The script takes a list of symbols as its arguments. Each line in the configuration file is processed separately. Lines may start with a number of guards. The following guards are defined: +xxx Include the file(s) on this line if the symbol xxx is defined. -xxx Exclude the file(s) on this line if the symbol xxx is defined. +!xxx Include the file(s) on this line if the symbol xxx is not defined. -!xxx Exclude the file(s) on this line if the symbol xxx is not defined. - Exclude this file. Used to avoid spurious --check messages. The guards are processed left to right. The last guard that matches determines if the file is included. If no guard is specified, the --default setting determines if the file is included. If no configuration file is specified, the script reads from standard input. The --check option is used to compare the specification file against the file system. If files are referenced in the specification that do not exist, or if files are not enlisted in the specification file warnings are printed. The --path option can be used to specify which directory or directories to scan. Multiple directories are separated by a colon (":") character. The --prefix option specifies the location of the files. AUTHOR
Andreas Gruenbacher <agruen@suse.de> (SuSE Linux AG) perl v5.14.2 2012-03-04 GUARDS(1)
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