TortoiseSVN application is running very slow.
Ít waits too long when trying to open Repo-browser or updating. It keeps showing the message "Please wait while the repository browser is initializing".
Then after waiting for 10 mins or so, it shows up the credential window, and then again a long wait.
I installed command line sliksuberversion, and updates from command line using subversion run as normal, from which I deduced that there is no OS or network related issue.
I enabled debugLogs, and got the following:
The timestamps show the delay. Eventually the server connection times out, due to the delay.
Please suggest.
Thanks for your suggestions and time on this. The issue was traced to ICMP not accessible in server machine, because it was not different subnet. I was able to ping the machine using domain name, but not by IP (this statement is correct, and it was not the other way round). What was surprising was the subversion was working fine, but not tortoise, which probably indicates that tortoisesvn has an additional network step (ping or something else) in their process over subversion. Thanks again.
I encountered the same. It worked before, and started after I was moved from cubicles to cubicles with maybe network reset although my IP address remains the same.
It works again after run ipconfig /renew and restart TortoiseSVN client.
Related
Ever since I ran the command dnscmd /Config /SocketPoolSize 9100 my Win'2008R2 dc is not working properly and is stuck for hrs at Applying Computer Settings after rebooting before it finally logs in. Obviously 9100 was a big mistake but I figured by re-running the same command but specifying 2500 (default) that things would be fine. I was wrong.
So I've deleted the SocketPoolSize afterwards directly from the registry in SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\DNS\Parameters in hopes of undoing it but the system still takes hrs before I can finally login. I have a feeling that the dnscmd command I ran and reverted is just coincidence and perhaps something else is causing Exchange service to get stuck with "Starting"
This is also preventing some services from starting (ie: Exchange 2010 - not best practice on DC, I know but it was never a problem).
Is there anything else that happens after running that command? Is there a way I can undo it using the same command or some other (rather than thru the registry)?
Turns out it had nothing to do with the dnscmd command I ran. I forgot that days ago I temporarily disabled Tcpipv6 on the network adapter but never rebooted until today after running the dnscmd. This incorrectly lead me to believe it was something to do with dnscmd.
One of my 10 Azure VMs running windows has suddenly became inaccessible! Azure Management Console shows the state of this VM as "running" the Dashboard shows no server activity since my last RDP logout 16 hours ago. I tried restarting the instance with no success, still inaccessible ( No RDP access, hosted application down, unsuccessful ping...).
I have changed the instance size from A5 to A6 using the management portal and everything went back to normal. Windows event viewer showed no errors except the unexpected shutdown today after my Instance size change. Nothing was logged between my RDP logout yesterday and the system startup today after changing the size.
I can't afford having the server down for 16 hours! Luckily this server was the development server.
How can I know what went wrong? Anyone faced a similar issue with Azure?
Thanks
there is no easy way to troubleshoot this without capturing it in a stuck state.
Sounds like you followed the recommended steps, i.e.:
- Check VM is running (portal/PowerShell/CLI).
- Check endpoints are valid.
- Restart VM
- Force a redeployment by changing the instance size.
To understand why it happened it would be necessary to leave it in a stuck state and open a support case to investigate.
There is work underway to make both self-service diagnosis and redeployment easier for situations like this.
Apparently nothing is wrong! After the reboot the machine was installing updates to complete the reboot. When I panicked, I have rebooted it again, stopped it, started it again and I have even changed its configuration thinking that it is dead. While in fact it was only installing updates.
Too bad that we cannot disable the automatic reboot or estimate the time it takes to complete.
I have a debian 7.5 based Ubuntu server, apache 2.2.22.
It's a rather vanilla installed XAMP used as a basic web server.
It used to work fine and I have no idea why it stopped working suddenly (there was some maintenance today but it worked when I left it - I changed partition sizes with Gparted).
When I try to access a website from the server (tried with w3m) all is working OK, including PHP and MySQL access.
When I try to access the same host (using a domain) from the outside, the browser keeps loading for a long while, eventually (after few minutes) saying the page could not be loaded.
I made sure that ports are open and accessible with outside scanner.
So I'm sure the Apache is available (working from inside the network, websites loading from SSH using w3M and pinging)
I'm sure the server is connected to the web (I can use putty to SSH)
the host is resolving to the correct IP (but won't ping from outside, only inside)
The ports seems to be opened (scanned and got OK for port 80)
I'm not a professional IT, so If there is info I can add that could help just ask away.
would really appreciate any idea or direction.
Thanks!
I still suspect the UFW/iptables firewall is blocking all incoming connections... Please go through this article and double check
http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ubuntu-server-disable-firewall/
If you're sure that the firewall config is OK, please try packet capturing with Wireshark to see what's going on underneath.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOTCRqa8U9Y How to install
Thanks for the help,
Oddly enough - It just started working again after 12 hours of not working.
A friend of mine, an IT person just called to try and help, and he simply connected (5 mins after I tried) and said it's all working for him.
I tried, and it's working for me also.
Have no idea why it stopped working, and why it is working now.
I think it might be an ISP problem or a router issue... The server is in our offices so I guess it could be both. I just don't understand why SSH would work and HTTP wouldn't.
I am experiencing a very strange behavior with oracle, maybe somebody can help me, let me summarize it real quick:
My OS of choice is debian linux, I am using Oracle XE 11.0.2.0. On linux startup, I run a script file which is located under /etc/init.d/. I added the following line to make oracle start on system start:
/etc/init.d/oracle-xe start
Right after this line , I run my application from the script, my application heavily relies on the oracle db, therefore once oracle starts, I am positive that my application will run ok. Unfortunately my assumption seems wrong.Here's why: I set up similar set up in 3 machines, in 2 of them I see weird behavior, after system start oracle db is not responding to connection requests, Even though oracle-xe start command completed executing.
My observation is the following, if I run my application right after oracle-xe start is executed, I receive ora-12505 errors at least for a minute: "TNS listener does not currently know of SID" . After a minute everything stabilizes, and my application starts working ok. 1 minute without a db on system startup is not acceptable for me performance-wise, therefore I am trying to solve this problem.
Surprisingly it does not happen in one of the other linux boxes I have here, I am not quite sure what is different on that box. I compared ora files, but couldn't find any difference, it seems like a wild goose chase...
I would be so grateful if anybody has experienced and solved ths problem before and shares that valuable solution with me.
I think I found the problem, looks like I am starting oracle-xe instance before I assign network interfaces an IP address, in that case it takes some time for oracle to receive connections, that requires me to set static ip on the linux boxes, which is something I don't want. Is there a solution so that I can still assign IP addresses later on?
I have pretty strange problem with Collectd. I'm not new to Collectd, was using it for a long time on CentOS based boxes, but now we have Ubuntu TLS 12.04 boxes, and I have really strange issue.
So, using version 5.2 on Ubuntu 12.04 TLS. Two boxes residing on Rackspace (maybe important, but I'm not sure). Network plugin configured using two local IPs, without any firewall in between and without any security (just to try to set simple client server scenario).
On both servers collectd writes in configured folders as it should write, but on server machine it doesn't write data received from client.
Troubleshooted with tcpdump, and I can clearly see UDP traffic and collectd data, including hostname and plugin names from my client machine, received on server, but they are not flushed to appropriate folder (configured by collectd) ever. Also running everything as root user, to avoid troubleshooting permissions.
Anyone has any idea or similar experience with this? Or maybe some idea what could I do for troubleshooting this beside trying to crawl internet (I think I clicked on every sensible link Google gave me in last two days) and checking network layer (which looks fine)?
And just small note: exactly the same happened with official 4.10.2 version from Ubuntu's repo. After trying to troubleshoot it for hours moved to upgrade to version five.
I'd suggest trying out the quite generic troubleshooting procedure based on the csv and logfile plugins, as described in this answer. As everything seems to be fine locally, follow this procedure on the server, activating only the network plugin (in addition to logfile, csv and possibly rrdtool).
So after no way of fixing this, I upgraded my Ubuntu to 12.04.2 LTS (3.2.0-24-virtual) and this just started working fine, without any intervention.