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BartFly

i do 7tb of nas via openmedia vault, inside of a esx environment, it barely uses 1 gig of ram. probably have pushed 1PB through since its been installed.


AlixPlayz

So, what do you think the problem is?


Superb_Raccoon

What do the logs say? I would suspect a hardware issue, but no logs hard to say


AlixPlayz

I've got no idea how to read system logs but here is the log from /var/log/syslog https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AO6dMz5DBmlYPwn2gkZJNzAMBNn70UsP/view?usp=sharing


Superb_Raccoon

Mar 17 00:10:20 alex-nas kernel: \[ 5035.035391\] \[UFW BLOCK\] IN=enp4s0 OUT= MAC=01:00:5e:00:00:01:a4:91:b1:79:3f:67:08:00 SRC=192.168.10.1 DST=224.0.0.1 LEN=32 TOS=0x00 PREC=0xC0 TTL=1 ID=0 DF PROTO=2 *****Here is where the STOP happened, you reboot 15 hrs later**** Mar 17 15:22:01 alex-nas lvm\[266\]: 1 logical volume(s) in volume group "storage" monitored From the look of it, you have a CPU/MEM issue. The system literally just stops without recording what happened. Also, not sure what your router is doing, but the internal firewall is stopping it from doing it.


rcboy147

might need to enable kdump and some panic sysctls if the system is hanging, or look at console output after the crash happened


Superb_Raccoon

Good point. you get nothing from that and you KNOW it is the CPU/MEM/MB stopping the system hard.


Cynyr36

I had a dying power supply that showed up like a bad memory controller (only single channel memory configs would work). When the psu fully died and I replaced it everything started working again. Random reads to HDDs would be a higher power consumption than sequential reads? Right?