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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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close(2)							System Calls Manual							  close(2)

NAME
close - close a file descriptor SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
closes the file descriptor indicated by fildes. fildes is a file descriptor obtained from a or system call. All associated file segments which have been locked by this process with the function are released (i.e., unlocked). RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, returns a value of 0; otherwise, it returns -1 and sets to indicate the error. ERRORS
fails if the any of following conditions are encountered: [EBADF] fildes is not a valid open file descriptor. [EINTR] An attempt to close a slow device or connection or file with pending aio requests was interrupted by a signal. The file descriptor still points to an open device or connection or file. [ENOSPC] Not enough space on the file system. This error can occur when closing a file on an NFS file system. [When a system call is executed on a local file system and if a new buffer needs to be allocated to hold the data, the buffer is mapped onto the disk at that time. A full disk is detected at this time and returns an error. When the system call is executed on an NFS file system, the new buffer is allocated without communicating with the NFS server to see if there is space for the buffer (to improve NFS performance). It is only when the buffer is written to the server (at file close or the buffer is full) that the disk-full condition is detected.] SEE ALSO
creat(2), dup(2), exec(2), fcntl(2), lockf(2), open(2), pipe(2), thread_safety(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
close(2)
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