Hi Tomasz, Here is some more hardware info related to HDDs and RAID card: Unit UnitType Status %RCmpl %V/I/M Stripe Size(GB) Cache AVrfy ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ u0 RAID-1 OK - - - 232.82 ON OFF u1 RAID-5 OK - - 64K 2095.44 ON OFF Port Status Unit Size Blocks Serial --------------------------------------------------------------- p0 OK u0 232.88 GB 488397168 6RY461CT p1 OK u0 232.88 GB 488397168 6RY44PSH p2 OK u1 698.63 GB 1465149168 WD-WCAPT0527412 p3 OK u1 698.63 GB 1465149168 WD-WCAPT0537910 p4 OK u1 698.63 GB 1465149168 WD-WCAPT0527026 p5 OK u1 698.63 GB 1465149168 WD-WCAPT0527156 p6 NOT-PRESENT - - - - p7 NOT-PRESENT - - - - Name OnlineState BBUReady Status Volt Temp Hours LastCapTest --------------------------------------------------------------------------- bbu On Yes OK OK OK 0 xx-xxx-xxxx Output from "free": total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 6119216 5964204 155012 0 393880 2291796 -/+ buffers/cache: 3278528 2840688 Swap: 3903784 1940 3901844 The snapshots are 180GB each. The current writing process freezes and working with the LV becomes impossible both locally and through the network. I've also noticed that any users browsing the LV via samba or netatalk (the LV is shared on the network) report that the network share slows down to the point where they cannot browse the folders any more. Otherwise the system remains operational as it is installed on a sepparate RAID1. When the problem occurs, killing the process thats writing to the LV, helps. By the way, there is a second server with different specs but using LVM snapshots in the same fashion and I've managed to reproduce the same problem. Regards, Veselin On Mon, Jun 16, 2008 at 04:51:36PM +0200, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote: > Veselin Kantsev schrieb: >> Hello Tomasz, >> thank you much for the prompt reply. >> >> The server has 6119216k of RAM in total. > > That's quite a bit.. > You would need terabytes of snapshots to fill it. > So perhaps it hangs for a different reason. > > Capacitors? Hardware? > > >> And most of it is shown as used all the time (To my knowledge thats just how >> linux utilizes ram). > > Please show the output of "free" command. The "buffers/cache" line is > your current RAM usage, excluding buffers (more or less). > > >> But from memory, the last time the server froze during copying (goes >> back to normal once I kill the copy process) I didn't notice any extreme >> RAM usage or swapping. > > Kernel data in memory used for snapshots will not be swapped out. > > >> As I'm rotating LVM snapshots weekly, there are 7 snapshots on the system >> at all times, and 1 of them is active(the last one taken). > > (...) > >> Do you see a flaw in this process that might be causing the issues? > > Unless you have terabytes of data in snapshots, it shouldn't be a problem. > > Does it freeze for good? Machine stops responding, stops logging, etc.? > > > -- > Tomasz Chmielewski > http://wpkg.org > > _______________________________________________ > linux-lvm mailing list > linux-lvm@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm > read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/ _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/