Difference between revisions of "Vserver watchdogs"
m |
m (→mynetstat) |
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Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
###### Adapt this one to your needs: |
###### Adapt this one to your needs: |
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− | LOGFILE="$( |
+ | LOGFILE="$(dirname $0)/mynetstat.log" |
#################################### |
#################################### |
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Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
"update") |
"update") |
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shift |
shift |
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− | CMD=" |
+ | CMD="cat > $LOGFILE" |
;; |
;; |
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"diff") |
"diff") |
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shift |
shift |
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− | CMD=" |
+ | CMD="diff -U0 $LOGFILE -" |
;; |
;; |
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"diff+update") |
"diff+update") |
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shift |
shift |
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− | CMD=" |
+ | CMD="diff -U0 $LOGFILE -" |
POSTUPDATE=true |
POSTUPDATE=true |
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;; |
;; |
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*) |
*) |
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− | CMD=" |
+ | CMD="cat" |
esac |
esac |
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− | /usr/sbin/chcontext --ctx 1 |
+ | /usr/sbin/chcontext --ctx 1 netstat --ip -lp $* |\ |
− | + | awk '\ |
|
FNR>2 { |
FNR>2 { |
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printf $1 "\t%-23s\t", $4; |
printf $1 "\t%-23s\t", $4; |
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Line 61: | Line 61: | ||
{$7=$6}; |
{$7=$6}; |
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sub(/\/.*/,"",$7); |
sub(/\/.*/,"",$7); |
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− | system("/usr/sbin/vps -p " $7 " -o pid,comm| |
+ | system("/usr/sbin/vps -p " $7 " -o pid,comm|sed \"1d;s/^[ 0-9]\\+//\"") |
− | }'| |
+ | }'|sort -bk 3 | eval $CMD |
# To get also args of the command, change "pid,command" by "pid,comm" |
# To get also args of the command, change "pid,command" by "pid,comm" |
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[ $? -eq 1 ] && $POSTUPDATE && exec $0 update $* |
[ $? -eq 1 ] && $POSTUPDATE && exec $0 update $* |
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</pre> |
</pre> |
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+ | |||
====/etc/cron.d/watch-vservers==== |
====/etc/cron.d/watch-vservers==== |
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MAILTO=root |
MAILTO=root |
Revision as of 19:59, 17 February 2007
Monitoring listening TCP/UDP processes
mynetstat
#!/bin/bash # Copyright: 2007 Philippe Teuwen <phil at teuwen dot org> # License: GPL # # Description: # Watch for modifications in the list of listening TCP/UDP processes across all vservers # Examples: mysql, imapproxy,.. crashes # IP binding broken after package upgrade # new suspicious listening process, etc # # Usage: # mynetstat [update|diff|diff+update] options # # mynetstat # Gives a clean list of listening processes in which vserver and with which binding # mynetstat update # Creates a snapshot in a logfile # mynetstat diff # Shows diffs compared to the snapshot # This is the one expected to be called by cron on the host # mynetstat diff+update # Same as diff but takes a new snapshot in case of changes # so cron doesn't send repetitively alerts # Options: # You can use numeric options of netstat: [--numeric|-n] [--numeric-hosts] [--numeric-ports] # Changelog: # v1.0 ###### Adapt this one to your needs: LOGFILE="$(dirname $0)/mynetstat.log" #################################### POSTUPDATE=false case "$1" in "update") shift CMD="cat > $LOGFILE" ;; "diff") shift CMD="diff -U0 $LOGFILE -" ;; "diff+update") shift CMD="diff -U0 $LOGFILE -" POSTUPDATE=true ;; *) CMD="cat" esac /usr/sbin/chcontext --ctx 1 netstat --ip -lp $* |\ awk '\ FNR>2 { printf $1 "\t%-23s\t", $4; if ($7 == "") {$7=$6}; sub(/\/.*/,"",$7); system("/usr/sbin/vps -p " $7 " -o pid,comm|sed \"1d;s/^[ 0-9]\\+//\"") }'|sort -bk 3 | eval $CMD # To get also args of the command, change "pid,command" by "pid,comm" [ $? -eq 1 ] && $POSTUPDATE && exec $0 update $*
/etc/cron.d/watch-vservers
MAILTO=root */15 * * * * root /home/vservers/tools/watch/mynetstat diff
Monitoring CPU-hungry logins
In some situations my CPU was burning like hell for days.
This was the vcontext/login process when using the command "vserver XX enter".
If it happens that the process is disconnected from its terminal it eats all the CPU :-(
I could reproduce the problem as follow:
- ssh to the server as normal user
- sudo su -
- vserver XX enter
- from another term, kill -9 one of the 2 su processes ("su -" or "-su")
- quit the current terminal
Now from another terminal you can see that
vps ax|grep " login"
shows a "login" process not attached to any tty (cf the "?") and using top you see it's running 100% cpu.
Actually the real process is called vcontext as seen by top, pgrep and as you can see in /proc/XXX/status but its command line was overwritten with "login\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0..." and commands like vps or pgrep -f show you this name "login" as you can see in /proc/XXX/cmdline.
So I wrote a script and installed it in a cron to kill any such dandling process:
pids=$(/usr/sbin/vps axc|\ egrep ' ? +[RS] +[1-9][0-9]*:[0-9]+ +vcontext'|\ sed 's/^ *\([0-9]\+\) .*$/\1/') [ "$pids" != "" ] && \ echo "Killing dandling login" && \ kill $pids
And /etc/cron.d/watch-vservers:
MAILTO=root */5 * * * * root /home/vservers/tools/kill-vcontext
This also shows something weird: processes in vservers don't appear with ps ax, ok, they appear with vps ax.
Now if I want to kill one of them from the host:
vkill 29825 vkill: vc_ctx_kill(): No such process chcontext --ctx 1 kill 29825 <no error but nothing happen neither because ctx1 can watch all but can only watch!> kill 29825 <works!!>
It seems that on newer versions, such direct kill will not work and will have to be chcontexted first.
Monitoring syslog-ng
I have a big syslog-ng aggregator + dumping into mysql, cf Syslog
But sometimes during/after cron.daily (logrotate?), syslog-ng dies, so I added to my /etc/cron.d/watch-vservers
*/15 * * * * root /usr/sbin/chcontext --ctx vserverX pgrep syslog-ng\|logrotate >/dev/null|| { echo "Error! Syslog-ng@vserverX seems to be down! I try to restart it..." && /usr/sbin/vserver vserverX exec /etc/init.d/syslog-ng start; }
Monitoring imapproxy
Imapproxy is in one vserver, the one with apache2 and squirrelmail and IMAP server is in another vserver, the mail server.
Because of racing between both vservers at boot time, imapproxy can fail to start if courier was not yet there
*/15 * * * * root /usr/sbin/chcontext --ctx vserverX pgrep imapproxy >/dev/null|| { /usr/sbin/chcontext --ctx vserverY pgrep couriertcp >/dev/null && { echo "Error! Imapproxy@vserverX seems to be down! I try to restart it..." && /usr/sbin/vserver vserverX exec /etc/init.d/imapproxy start; } }