[SGVLUG] Recommendation of an open source hardware diagnostic tool

Jess Bermudes jbermudes at gmail.com
Mon Mar 3 13:08:25 PST 2014


For the RAM, would memtest86 be something like what you're looking for?


On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 12:35 PM, Matthew Campbell <dvdmatt at gmail.com> wrote:

> Scott, that is an awesome diagram!  It really points out the right tools
> to deep dive into each section of the system.  Someone somewhere has
> already written a script to install, configure, run and interpret the
> output of the 30 tools.  I don't want to re-invent the wheel ;)
>
> Dan, swapping hardware is a good suggestion but I hope that running a
> benchmark tool should expose the problem component if there it may also
> cover driver issues, kernel issues, networking interactions, etc..  There
> are several closed source solutions along these lines. I was hoping someone
> on this list had experience with an open source product like the Phoronix
> suite
>
> http://www.phoronix-test-suite.com/
> http://openbenchmarking.org/
>
> or any of the multitude of other open source benchmarks.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benchmark_%28computing%29#Common_benchmarks
>
> Matt
>
>
> ---------
> *Matthew Campbell*
> Storage Solution Consultant
> Storage Design and Engineering
>
> *Kaiser Permanente*
> IMG-Systems Integration
> 99 S. Oakland
> Pasadena, CA 91101
>
> 626-564-7228 (office)
> 8-338-7228 (tie-line)
> 818-314-9897 (mobile phone)
> Green Center 3-North, 031W29
> ---------
> *kp.org/thrive <http://kp.org/thrive>*
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 8:49 AM, Dan Kegel <dank at kegel.com> wrote:
>
>> I wonder if you could learn anything by swapping out the motherboard
>> with a cheaper one.
>>
>> On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 7:31 PM, Matthew Campbell <dvdmatt at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> > Yep.  Tried that with the RAM but the Mobo and CPU are the latest and I
>> > don't want to blow another grand on duplicates...
>> >
>> > Matt
>> >
>> > ---------
>> > Matthew Campbell
>> > Storage Solution Consultant
>> > Storage Design and Engineering
>> >
>> > Kaiser Permanente
>> > IMG-Systems Integration
>> > 99 S. Oakland
>> > Pasadena, CA 91101
>> >
>> > 626-564-7228 (office)
>> > 8-338-7228 (tie-line)
>> > 818-314-9897 (mobile phone)
>> > Green Center 3-North, 031W29
>> > ---------
>> > kp.org/thrive
>> >
>> >
>> > On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 5:01 PM, Dan Kegel <dank at kegel.com> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Swapping out part by part until the problem goes away might be your
>> best
>> >> bet.
>> >>
>> >> Am 02.03.2014 15:24 schrieb "Matthew Campbell" <dvdmatt at gmail.com>:
>> >>
>> >>> Does anyone have a hardware diagnostic tool they like, preferably open
>> >>> source?  I have been fighting a host for two weeks now and after
>> finding and
>> >>> submitted 2 kernel bugs have begun to suspect that the problems I am
>> running
>> >>> into are being exposed by a hardware failure.
>> >>>
>> >>> The system appears to be running fine, but every 10-15 seconds will
>> zone
>> >>> out for a couple of seconds.  At first I thought it was a BTRFS bug,
>> and the
>> >>> errors I was seeing turned out to be just that.
>> >>>
>> >>> Once they were fixed the freezing kept on.  Further poking uncovered a
>> >>> NFS bug in its interaction with the underlying filesystem, but having
>> also
>> >>> patched the kernel for that the poor performance continues.
>> >>>
>> >>> Now I'm starting to see errors of this sort in my syslog:
>> >>>
>> >>> 2014-03-02T22:39:00.262Z cpu6:34527)WARNING: LinScsi:
>> >>> SCSILinuxQueueCommand:1207: queuecommand failed with status = 0x1056
>> Unknown
>> >>> status vmhba0:0:0:0 (driver name: ahci) - Message repeated 4 times
>> >>> 2014-03-02T22:39:00.262Z cpu2:32791)ScsiDeviceIO: 2324:
>> >>> Cmd(0x412e8088eac0) 0x4d, CmdSN 0x784 from world 0 to dev
>> >>>
>> "t10.ATA_____INTEL_SSDSC2BW240A4_____________________CVDA341000752403GN__"
>> >>> failed H:0x0 D:0x8 P:0x0 Possible sense data: 0x0 0x0 0x0.
>> >>> 2014-03-02T22:39:00.275Z cpu2:32784)ScsiDeviceIO: 2324:
>> >>> Cmd(0x412e80842b00) 0x28, CmdSN 0x51c3 from world 32878 to dev
>> >>>
>> "t10.ATA_____INTEL_SSDSC2BW240A4_____________________CVDA341000752403GN__"
>> >>> failed H:0x0 D:0x8 P:0x0 Possible sense data: 0x0 0x0 0x0.
>> >>>
>> >>> Could my SSD be failing?  But I just replaced the previous boot disk
>> as
>> >>> it looked like it was failing...
>> >>>
>> >>> Device sense code D:0x8 equates to 08h  BUSY according to these docs:
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=289902
>> >>>
>> >>> It could be a MOBO issue with the SATA port or even the CPU or RAM.
>>  Ugh.
>> >>>
>> >>> I tried memtest86 and all passed...
>> >>>
>> >>> Any suggestions on a full-system hardware test suite would be much
>> >>> appreciated.
>> >>>
>> >>> Matt
>> >>>
>> >
>>
>>
>
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