Help on cluster hang problem...
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Robert G. Brown rgb at phy.duke.eduWed May 30 07:35:43 PDT 2001
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On Tue, 29 May 2001, David Vos wrote: > Hmmm. I've seen Windows do that to enough computers I doubt the problem > is the power supply. Although to make Linux hang like that is usually a > hardware problem. > > David > > On Tue, 29 May 2001, Greg Lindahl wrote: > > > Or, maybe I don't understand power switches and it actually is bios > > catchable or something. I don't think it is Linux or Windows -- I think it is just a mismatch between the power supply capacity and the hardware configuration. I've definitely seen difficulty with an ATX system turning itself on and off with an inferior power supply -- I once had to go through three on a brand new system to get the damn thing to power up as the vendor clearly hadn't read the motherboard spec (or powered it up before shipping it, grrr). Note that all three had the proper lineout voltages (I checked) -- they simply didn't have the peak power capacity required to do the switching. Thus by "inferior" I mean unable to provide the >>peak<< current required on the switching line to make an ATX board (given the hardware loading of the total system configuration) turn on or off, not that there is anything necessarily "wrong with" or cheap about the power supply itself. Note also that the supply can actually have plenty of nominal capacity measured in aggregate watts -- it is its ability to deliver power on ONE LINE that matters. Since I tend to get the cheapest possible systems, I probably see this more often than some. In my own experience, it is not at all unusual that the front panel toggle (which is the thing that controls this) on a "loaded" hardware configurations can turn the system on when it is basically unloaded but cannot seem to turn the system off when running (presumably it could provide enough juice for the first with the system "off", but when the motherboard is under even idle load it cannot manage the second). I've got a couple of these systems sitting in the room with me right now. One is "loaded" -- CD-RW, a couple of HD's, a floppy, dual CPUs, lots of memory, a NIC, a high end video card. The other isn't as loaded but has an older motherboard and a smaller case and power supply. They run only Linux -- this isn't an OS issue. Motherboards often come with their switching current requirements indicated somewhere in the technical specs, but given the vast range of motherboards, cases and "generic" power supplies, and hardware configurations within the case (with every element making its own demands, in many cases with e.g. NICs powered up even before the system is turned "on") it really isn't that surprising that some systems are mismatched or end up operating on the margins of the switching power range. Systems that have a hard time on the front panel switch also generally can't manage to do a proper powerdown "halt" in software. A LOT of systems come with both the front panel "hot" switch and a rocker switch on the power supply itself, and even if the front panel switch is tired and doesn't want to turn a system off the back one always works. So does pulling the plug;-) rgb -- Robert G. Brown http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/ Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305 Durham, N.C. 27708-0305 Phone: 1-919-660-2567 Fax: 919-660-2525 email:rgb at phy.duke.edu
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