My server rebooted for an unknown reason..
Maxime Alarie
malarie at processia.com
Tue May 25 17:09:16 UTC 2010
Thanks Jeff,
The "server" is a workstation, its not a rackmount. I checked the logs, and like you said, it might be a hardware issue, because no shutdown messages were anounced in messages and syslog.. Only startup messages after some normnal operations.
I will try to investigate the problem.
Thanks much
Maxime
-----Original Message-----
From: ubuntu-users-bounces at lists.ubuntu.com [mailto:ubuntu-users-bounces at lists.ubuntu.com] On Behalf Of J
Sent: 25 May 2010 11:35
To: Ubuntu user technical support,not for general discussions
Subject: Re: My server rebooted for an unknown reason..
On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 11:20, Maxime Alarie <malarie at processia.com> wrote:
> I have Ubuntu server 9.1 with no UI. This week-end my server rebooted for
> some unknown reason to me. I tried to check in the logs but nothing led me
> to the reason. I don't think it's a security update installation,
> usually (I think) you have to reboot the server yourself... If not, is there
> a place I can check to see if the automatics/security updates are turned
> on?
Is this a "real" server or a desktop you're using as a server?
most rack servers have a management controller built in or added on
(at least all the ones I've ever worked on) that will allow you to log
in to the BMC and check the machine logs for problems.
It's been my experience that sudden, spontaneous reboots with no
messages in the OS logs tends to indicate a hardware issue, either a
failing CPU or piece of RAM, something throwing an NMI, or overheating
or PDU problem.
That being said, here's a little bit about unattended-upgrades package
https://help.ubuntu.com/9.04/serverguide/C/automatic-updates.html
and this:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AutomaticSecurityUpdates
If you have unattended-upgrades installed, there's a line in the conf
file that lets you specify whether you want automatic reboots or not.
However, if you check your logs (messages and syslog) for any
legitimate reboot, you should see a series of shutdown messages
followed by the startup messages from the reboot.
If you see normal system messages followed immediately by startup
messages, that's an indication that something went wrong and the
system rebooted itself due to some error outside the OS.
Also, do you have any watchdog timers set that monitor for OS crashes
and such that could be triggering a reboot if the watchdog thinks that
the server is hung?
Cheers
Jeff
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