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187 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
187 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Conserver FAQ
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=============
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This is the Conserver FAQ. Any suggestions/corrections/etc should be
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directed to faq@conserver.com. The FAQ answers the following questions:
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1) What is conserver?
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2) Where can I find the software?
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3) How do I deal with these serial ports?
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4) How can I tell what compile-time defaults were used?
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5) What does "conserver: getservbyname: conserver: No such file or
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directory" mean (or something close to that)?
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6) What does "console: gethostbyname: console: host lookup error"
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mean (or something close to that)?
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7) How do I set up a serial port for no parity?
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8) Is "Conserver" a Trademark or Registered Trademark?
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9) When I connect to a console, it says it is down. Why?
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10) Is there a technical reason why --with-maxmemb's default is 16?
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I've changed mine to 96.
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99) OK, things just don't seem to work. Help?!?
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1) What is conserver?
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From an email I quickly wrote to a potential user (I'll try and
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clean it up and make it a little clearer sometime soon):
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Conserver is an application that allows multiple users to watch a
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serial console at the same time. It can log the data, allows users
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to take write-access of a console (one at a time), and has a
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variety of bells and whistles to accentuate that basic
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functionality. The idea is that conserver will log all your serial
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traffic so you can go back and review why something crashed, look
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at changes (if done on the console), or tie the console logs into a
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monitoring system (just watch the logfiles it creates). With
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multi-user capabilities you can work on equipment with others,
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mentor, train, etc. It also does all that client-server stuff so
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that, assuming you have a network connection, you can interact with
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any of the equipment from home or wherever.
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2) Where can I find the software?
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The latest version can be found at http://www.conserver.com/
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3) How do I wire/hook up serial ports?
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David "Zonker" Harris has a wonderful set of pages that talk about
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hooking up many types of terminal servers, equipment, etc. It also
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provides links to other serial port references. You can find his
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pages at http://www.conserver.com/consoles/.
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Celeste Stokely also has a wealth of references at
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http://www.stokely.com/. Just look around and be amazed at what
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you'll find!
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4) How can I tell what compile-time defaults were used?
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The compile-time defaults can be found by running conserver and
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console with the -V flag. Simple as that.
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5) What does "conserver: getservbyname: conserver: No such file or
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directory" mean (or something close to that)?
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When conserver was compiled, it was told to use the /etc/services
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entry of "conserver" (what came after getservbyname:). You'll need
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to either recompile conserver and hard-code a port number (using
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--with-port=<num>) or enter "conserver" in /etc/services.
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6) What does "console: gethostbyname: console: host lookup error"
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mean (or something close to that)?
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When the console command was compiled, it was told to use the
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hostname "console" (what came after gethostbyname:) as the master
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conserver host. You'll need to either reconfigure with the
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appropriate name of your conserver host (--with-master=<name>) or
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add an alias of "console". In most cases, adding an alias is my
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suggestion.
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7) How do I set up a local serial port for no parity?
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The manpage has the answer to this question. For those that don't
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want to read it, here are some guidelines. For pre-7.2.2, you'd
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want to use a 'p' after the baud rate ("9600p", for example). For
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7.2.2 thru 7.2.7, you can use an 'n'. For 8.0.0 and beyond, you use
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'parity none;'.
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8) Is "Conserver" a trademark or registered trademark?
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The best answer I can give is "not as far as I know". A couple of
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quick searches through the source code doesn't find any claim of a
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trademark. I've never done a registered trademark search, but if
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it had been registered (by a previous author), I'm sure it would be
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mentioned. But I'm no lawyer and don't deal with these types of
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things, so I'm not exactly sure what I'm taking about and my answer
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becomes a very vague "not as far as I know".
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9) When I connect to a console, it says it is down. Why?
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There are multiple reasons why this might happen. First, see if it's
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just a remnant of some other temporary problem. Try and bring the
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console up by doing a '^Eco' from the client. If that doesn't work,
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there's a more serious problem which, hopefully, the conserver logfile
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will explain. Check the log for any permission problems, connection
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refused messages, etc. You might get more useful information in
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the log by using the -v option or even by enabling debugging with
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-D (ideally that shouldn't be necessary). Depending on the type of
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console, your system might be out of pseudo-terminals, another process
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might have a terminal server port occupied (another console server or
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telnet session), or there was an unseen typo in a path or hostname.
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The logfile should show hints of things like this and other issues.
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10) Is there a technical reason why --with-maxmemb's default is 16?
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I've changed mine to 96.
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The following is an array of things you need to think about when
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adjusting --with-maxmemb. It's a bit long, but it's an important
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question.
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The big reason (and the main reason for conserver spawning multiple
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processes) is the maximum number of open files a process can have.
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Each console can have a few file descriptors associated with it
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(device, logfile, connected users, and listening socket). So, each
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process will have about ( 2 * consoles + users + 1 ) open files
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(--with-maxmemb sets the maximum number of consoles per process
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in the equation). Although most current operating systems allow a
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large number of open files per process, the general assumption is
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it's still pretty low.
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You also have the speed of your conserver host vs the rates at which
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data could be streaming to it. Go back a decade and this was probably
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more of an issue than today, but it's still something to think about.
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And then you have the problem of delays. If any of the 96 console
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connections "lock up", it'll delay all activity on the 96 consoles.
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With 16, there's less of an impact. This can be an issue once the
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server is up or during startup. Also, with 16 consoles per process,
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you get a bit more parallelization during startup.
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So, is there any reason not to up the number to 96? No. Assuming you
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know the risks and weigh things appropriately. If I remember right,
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I've upped the number to 48 at some sites. But that was mainly to
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reduce the memory footprint in older versions of the code which had
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statically allocated buffers. No need to worry about that with the
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current code. Personally, I wouldn't change from 16 unless there
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was a really good reason (like wanting to only have one child process
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for firewall rules or some such reason).
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99) OK, things just don't seem to work. Help?!?
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Yes, this is a pretty vague question, but here are a few tips that
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might help.
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- Is your low-level serial connection correct? Incorrect cables,
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adapters, wiring, etc. could be the issue. Using a signal tracer
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or attaching other equipment that's known to work (like a laptop)
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might be enlightening. Check out
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http://www.conserver.com/consoles/msock.html for basic serial
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information (or http://www.conserver.com/consoles/ for even more
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info).
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- Can you talk to the serial port with different software? Try
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using tip or minicom or another application to make sure you can
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interact with the port. If you're not seeing the right info
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here, there may be a baud rate issue, a lack of a getty (or
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equivalent) running on the host or...*shrug*. But, if you've
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determined that you already have a valid low-level signal
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connection, you shouldn't have to worry about that level of
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problem.
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- So, you're getting the proper interaction from other
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applications, but not conserver? Are the port name and baud rate
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correct in the conserver.cf file? When you start conserver
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(adding -v doesn't hurt), are there any warnings/errors? Is the
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port in the "up" state when you use "console -u"? If not, what
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happens when you connect and then do a "^eco" escape sequence to
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bring it up? What does the conserver process say when you do
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this? These are the types of things I look at first. If that
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doesn't help you determine the problem, others will want to see
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this info (and possibly the same steps with both the client and
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server using the -D option) to be able to help. Posting your
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questions to the users mailing list is probably your next step.
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- Have you tried a search on the conserver site (it searches
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mailing list traffic as well) to see if someone else has gone
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through the same problem?
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