Re: how can I stress a server?

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]



Rudi Ahlers wrote:
John, I know what ECC does. I have 2 Dell PE860 servers with 8GB ECC
DDRII RAM as well, and they're both giving RAM problems. I had top
swap-out the RAM 2 times with the suppliers already, and swapped out a
motherboard on the one of the servers. Honestly, ECC isn't my
favourate to use.

Wow! Everybody doing serious business wouldn't go without it (i work for a couple of Banks and government agencies), but that's your choice and i respect that. But if you want to talk about five 9's, then you'd surely go with ECC and other invaluable features like watchdog timer, management cards, BIOS serial redirection, chip kill, etc.

It all depend on your needs i agree but don't reject server grade hardware so easily!


At the same time, I have about 8 servers with cheap Gigabyte
motherboards and non-ECC RAM, which have been running for close to 4
years now, without any hickups at all.

That's bad stats. It's not because my neighbour has a problem with his Mercedes and that i have no problem with my 4 Hyundai that Hyundai are better than Mercedes!!! Not only that, but sitting 6 adults in a mini Hyundai may be possible but we'll be much more confortable in the big Mercedes! Know what i mean?


It's the first time I try the Intel board, since it's supposed to be a
step-up from the desktop boards, and has 4 memory slots as apposed to
only 2.

... and limited by the fanout of the CPU / Chipset... As you put more memory, you'll have to relax timing and use proper memory brand that is certified for the mainboard.

The server had the same problems when I only had 4GBM RAM (2 slots
used & 2 slots open), so I don't think that the capacitive load is the
problem here. Right now the server is still at the datacentre - which
is 2 hours drive there & back with traffic, so I'm going to get it
later today / tonight, as soon as I've moved all the data across to
the slower gigabyte server, and then I can try the RAM timings thing
in the BIOS.

This could be a chipset problem, bad power supply, and the list goes on.


But, how can I put a LOT of load onto it, and see what's causing the
problem? For all I know, the motherboard could be faulty, or the CPU,
or maybe even the SATA bus?


Putting high load without having hardware monitoring won't tell you much IMHO.

I'd first test the power supply. Then remove everything you can and test with Memtest86+ (let's say, overnight, and while you're at it watch the power supply under load).

Swap memory with some you know is good. If the problem persist, you could possibly have a chipset problem.


Good luck.


Guy Boisvert, ing
IngTegration inc.
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

[Index of Archives]     [CentOS]     [CentOS Announce]     [CentOS Development]     [CentOS ARM Devel]     [CentOS Docs]     [CentOS Virtualization]     [Carrier Grade Linux]     [Linux Media]     [Asterisk]     [DCCP]     [Netdev]     [Xorg]     [Linux USB]
  Powered by Linux