Linux Command Bus Error
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How To Solve Bus Error In Linux
_ Server Fault is a question and answer site for system and network administrators. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's linux bus error core dumped how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Server responds “bus error” to every command up vote 4 down vote favorite I have a linux bus error centos machine dedicated to MySQL server with a pretty high load. Today I woke up and was terrified to see that database server is down. I could connect to it via SSH, but it was responding with bus error to each and every command: [root@r1304 home]# ls Bus error [root@r1304 home]# tail /var/log/messages Bus error [root@r1304 home]# reboot Bus error [root@r1304 home]# free -m Bus error [root@r1304 home]# chkdisk Bus error I went to Data Center and did a hard
Rpm Bus Error
reset, which seemed to help, but after a half an hour situation reapeated and now I can't even connet via SSH anymore. Any ideas what this could be? how to diagnose such a problem and what are possible fixes? Server has 32 GB RAM, 2xSSD drives with software RAID UPDATE According to Zabbix, when MySQL died, number of processes stated to increase drammaticaly, until I did a hard reset. What could those be? Number of processes linux centos hardware ssd bus share|improve this question edited Jul 24 '14 at 20:09 msanford 1,2251224 asked Dec 8 '12 at 13:30 Temnovit 31241224 Those are processes piling up waiting for I/O. Something is happening at the storage layer. –ewwhite Dec 8 '12 at 23:47 What was the issue? –ewwhite Dec 10 '12 at 10:32 @ewwhite, well, the hard drive completely died. Hello, kingston SSD. I'm bying a new one and restoring from a backup. –Temnovit Dec 10 '12 at 19:41 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 6 down vote accepted Your storage system seems to have failed. You can't read from disk at this point. Can you see the messages in the kernel ring buffer? Look at the output of dmesg if the command even works at this point. Do you have any backups or replication enabled? share|improve this answer answered Dec 8 '12 at 13:44 ewwhite 151k4
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Rpmdb Open Failed
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here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5870353/bus-error-system-error workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack http://stackoverflow.com/questions/212466/what-is-a-bus-error Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 6.2 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; bus error it only takes a minute: Sign up “Bus error” system error [closed] up vote 6 down vote favorite 2 I am running a linux tool which uses some system libraries as we as some custom libraries. The purpose of the tool is to access/configure a PCI-express cards that has some firmware running on it. I made some slight change linux command bus to code,nothing significant and suddenly got a "Bus error". I know that is is caused by unaligned memory access, but in the above context is it more likely to be in the firmware memory, i.e a firmware read across the PCI-express bus. I certainly don't believe that my small software change could have caused the "Bus error". Another surprising fact is that a different version of software is working well with this firmware. Can anyone throw some light on the issue. linux debugging bus share|improve this question edited May 3 '11 at 13:44 skaffman 278k63619656 asked May 3 '11 at 13:40 liv2hak 3,8741759109 closed as off-topic by Ciro Santilli 烏坎事件2016六四事件 法轮功, Yu Hao, Chris Loonam, John Pirie, Rob Aug 7 '15 at 16:35 This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:"Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are no
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 6.2 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up What is a bus error? up vote 156 down vote favorite 49 What does the "bus error" message mean, and how does it differ from a segfault? c unix segmentation-fault bus-error share|improve this question edited Oct 18 '15 at 10:44 Cool Guy 15.7k51952 asked Oct 17 '08 at 14:48 raldi 7,272216178 add a comment| 15 Answers 15 active oldest votes up vote 151 down vote accepted Bus errors are rare nowadays on x86 and occur when your processor cannot even attempt the memory access requested, typically: using a processor instruction with an address that does not satisfy its alignment requirements. Segmentation faults occur when accessing memory which does not belong to your process, they are very common and are typically the result of: using a pointer to something that was deallocated. using an uninitialized hence bogus pointer. using a null pointer. overflowing a buffer. PS: To be more precise this is not manipulating the pointer itself that will cause issues, it's accessing the memory it points to (dereferencing). share|improve this answer edited Oct 17 '08 at 15:18 answered Oct 17 '08 at 15:12 bltxd 5,72322336 52 They aren't rare; I'm just at Exercise 9 from How to Learn C the Hard Way and already encountered one... –11684 Mar 26 '13 at 20:12 5 Another cause of bus errors (on Linux anyway) is when the operating system can't back a virtual page with physical memory (e.g. low-memory conditions or out of huge pages when using huge page memory.) Typically mmap (and malloc) just reserve the virtual address space, and the kernel assigns the physical memory on demand (so called soft page faults.) Make a large enough malloc, and then write to enough of it and you'll get a bus error. –Eloff Jul 14 '15 at 0:09 add a comment| up vote 58 down vote A segfault is accessing memory that you're not allowed to access. It's read-only, you don't ha