CPU Usage 100%
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@themcv i’ve done it through sudo, I have upgrade FOG before and I don’t recall ever doing it as root : S let me give that a shot
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@themcv so both root and sudo fail at the same part : S
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one thing I did notice is that https://svn.code.sf.net/p/freeghost/code/tags/1.4.4 does not get binaries1.4.4.zip but instead binaries 1.4.3.zip which is what is looking for so that’s fair but one thing that is different about that zip file is that the owner if root and not fog like the rest of the folders
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Ooooohh so you’re using svn not git? That might be the problem.
What does
git branch
bring up if /root/fogproject/ ? -
I initially set it up with subversion back in the day so i kinda stuck to svn on every upgrade! i’ll give GIT a try
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Sure. If you want to upgrade to the dev-branch (I would) we can go from there and see if it’s any better.
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@themcv hey, i upgraded using GIT and now i’m on 1.4.4 and now running top:
and this is vSphere performance for CPU
does FOG generally use that muchCPU MHz? it is the VM that uses most CPU in this VM Host:
Seems like quite a lot to me
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@anthony-delarosa How many client computers (with fog client installed) are on your network? With mysql at 27% it sounds like you have quite a few checking in.
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@george1421 we do, easily over 800 clients! i was not aware that the clients would be checking in with FOG! I thought it was FOG that would contact the host if it needed to communicate something to it
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@anthony-delarosa No the fog client works the other way around, the clients check into the master fog server for things to do. They also post inventory info and such.
Since you have a great performance data so far, I wonder if you would be willing to help the fog project by doing something I had on the back burner for a while.
The idea is simply to install php-fpm and have apache use that instead of its internal php engine. I’m interested to know how that impact:
- Performance of the web gui
- Impact on performance of the entire fog server CPU usage.
I see you are using an older OS, but the php-fpm package should still be available in epel or in the centos repository. If you have a little time to test this idea let me know and I will put together a tutorial on how to set this up. Reverting back to the default apache php can be done by just commenting out one line. I would do it on my production fog server, but I only have a small campus. I’ve been looking for someone who had around 1000 clients to see if the test was dramatic.
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@anthony-delarosa In your case you can in crease the check-in delay to help with cpu usage on your fog server. You can do this with the understanding that it will also take longer for clients to see snapin deployments and other assigned tasks. It will not impact image deployment only fog client tasks. (but I’d like to see the results of the php-fpm test before you make this change if you agree).
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@anthony-delarosa said in CPU Usage 100%:
@george1421 we do, easily over 800 clients! i was not aware that the clients would be checking in with FOG! I thought it was FOG that would contact the host if it needed to communicate something to it
The fog client uses polling to communicate with the fog server, this is detailed here: https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php?title=FOG_Client#Polling_Behavior
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@george1421 hey George! yeah i think i can help you out there! send me the detailed steps i need to take and i can always take a snapshot of this so if all fails i can revert back!
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@george1421 is this the setting i can increase? the FOG_CHECKIN_TIMEOUT ?
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@anthony-delarosa Excellent, thank you.
Here are my thoughts on how to set this up. I’m only posting below for my reference. I want to spin up a Cento 6.7 FOG server tomorrow and test the process out before you implement it. I also want to see if memcache will help with the process too. But I need to do a bit more research first.
# yum install php-fpm # chkconfig --levels 235 php-fpm on Edit /etc/php-fpm.d/www.conf to use sockets # vi /etc/php-fpm.d/www.conf ;listen = 127.0.0.1:9000 listen = /tmp/php5-fpm.sock listen.owner = apache listen.group = apache # service php-fpm start Setting up Apache and mod_fastcgi Install the RPMForge repo: # wget http://pkgs.repoforge.org/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.3-1.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm # rpm -ivh rpmforge-release-0.5.3-1.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm Add some priorities which repo to use: # yum install yum-priorities # vi /etc/yum.repos.d/epel.repo ... add the line priority=10 to the [epel] section # yum install mod_fastcgi Configure mod_fastcgi If you have php enabled disable it # mv /etc/httpd/conf.d/{php.conf,php.conf.disable} # mkdir /usr/lib/cgi-bin/ # vi /etc/httpd/conf.d/mod_fastcgi.conf LoadModule fastcgi_module modules/mod_fastcgi.so <IfModule mod_fastcgi.c> DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.shtml index.cgi AddHandler php5-fcgi .php Action php5-fcgi /php5-fcgi Alias /php5-fcgi /usr/lib/cgi-bin/php5-fcgi FastCgiExternalServer /usr/lib/cgi-bin/php5-fcgi -socket /tmp/php5-fpm.sock -pass-header Authorization # For monitoring status with e.g. Munin <LocationMatch "/(ping|status)"> SetHandler php5-fcgi-virt Action php5-fcgi-virt /php5-fcgi virtual </LocationMatch> </IfModule> # service httpd restart
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@anthony-delarosa Yes that is the right setting, default check in time is 5 minutes. But if you can hold off a day or so until we can test the php-fpm code. I want to see if it makes a difference on the default settings for FOG. In ‘theory’ it should make a dramatic difference in overall FOG performance.
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If you have time to help us test this new configuration, please let me know and I will provide instructions.
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hey @george1421 how ya doing? yeah sure I can help you guys out! can we schedule this for next week? had a backup meltdown n FOG hadn’t been backed up in a few days so Veeam is doing it’s FULL BACKUP and since our FOG server has over 2 TBs of images it’s backing that up now but should be done soon. Next week works?
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@anthony-delarosa Ok when you are ready we can move forward. These instuctions are not destructive and can be reversed with a comment in a config file and restarting apache.
Here is where I’ve been documenting the config changes: https://forums.fogproject.org/topic/10717/can-php-fpm-make-fog-web-gui-fast
The change to my server has made a difference in web gui response time. But again I don’t have a large campus so its hard to scale how much of a change its made. The instructions I created were for centos 7, but should translate to 6.7 without issue. If you run into an issue I’m spinning up a 6.7 instance of centos just to be sure.
As part of your task. I would like you to track in vmware vm cpu usage to see when you turn on php-fpm if there is a change (in either direction) or no change. There are two parts I want to test one step at a time.
- Enable php-fpm
- Turn on memcache to store temporary session information in memory instead of the file system.
Your vm should have 3-4 GB of ram for this test. If you have more already then that is fine. I just want to make sure we have room to spawn up everything.
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@anthony-delarosa Do you have golden images going? I’ve not ever heard of 2TB of images before! Then again, I don’t think anybody has had as big of a FOG environment as you. : )