Difference between revisions of "Platform troubleshooting"

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= Diagnose =
 
To diagnose issues with the platform, the first step is to look at the platform log:
 
To diagnose issues with the platform, the first step is to look at the platform log:
  
 
<blockquote><u>Fedora</u></blockquote>
 
<blockquote><u>Fedora</u></blockquote>
  tail -300 /var/hda/platform/html/log/production.log | fpaste
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  tail -300 /var/hda/platform/html/log/production.log | apaste
  
 
<blockquote><u>Ubuntu</u></blockquote>
 
<blockquote><u>Ubuntu</u></blockquote>
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It's possible that /etc/http/conf.d/10*.conf files are wedging the web server (httpd/apache) configuration. Restart apache and check the error_log (/var/log/httpd or /var/log/apache2).
 
It's possible that /etc/http/conf.d/10*.conf files are wedging the web server (httpd/apache) configuration. Restart apache and check the error_log (/var/log/httpd or /var/log/apache2).
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= Dashboard Error =
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* You will see a message that states:
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<pre>The Dashboard has encountered an exception!
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Woopsie. Sorry about that!
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It could be due to a bug, or very low memory, or very low disk in the root (/) partition.
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If your disk or memory are not critical, it's likely a bug.</pre>
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* You can verify disk space by doing:
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df -h
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* If it reflects very little or no space on '''root (/)''', then you need to clear some space.  Best way to do this is remove large files from shares.

Revision as of 01:14, 1 April 2017

Diagnose

To diagnose issues with the platform, the first step is to look at the platform log:

Fedora

tail -300 /var/hda/platform/html/log/production.log | apaste

Ubuntu

tail -300 /var/hda/platform/html/log/production.log | apaste

It's possible that /etc/http/conf.d/10*.conf files are wedging the web server (httpd/apache) configuration. Restart apache and check the error_log (/var/log/httpd or /var/log/apache2).

Dashboard Error

  • You will see a message that states:
The Dashboard has encountered an exception!
Woopsie. Sorry about that!
It could be due to a bug, or very low memory, or very low disk in the root (/) partition.
If your disk or memory are not critical, it's likely a bug.
  • You can verify disk space by doing:
df -h
  • If it reflects very little or no space on root (/), then you need to clear some space. Best way to do this is remove large files from shares.