From: Travis C. <tra...@sp...> - 2012-10-03 18:23:36
|
It's been a while, but doing the import/export thing worked quite well for several sites. I not have the problem of Debian Sarge being limited to 3G of RAM. I have some sites that are 20G in size and they will not export. I get an Out of Memory error. The weird thing is that it never hits swap. I can get 2.9G free on the box, start the export, it will eventually drop the RAM down to about 120 free, bounce around and then eventually die. It never tried to hit swap. ulimit -a -t: cpu time (seconds) unlimited -f: file size (blocks) unlimited -d: data seg size (kbytes) unlimited -s: stack size (kbytes) 8192 -c: core file size (blocks) 0 -m: resident set size (kbytes) unlimited -u: processes unlimited -n: file descriptors 1024 -l: locked-in-memory size (kb) unlimited -v: address space (kb) unlimited -x: file locks unlimited Can anyone give my any pointers? Thanks! -Travis On Jul 30, 2012, at 4:00 PM, tra...@sp... wrote: > On 2012-07-30 14:35, Peter Leonard wrote: >> On Mon, 30 Jul 2012, Michael Peters wrote: >> >>> On 07/30/2012 02:16 PM, tra...@sp... wrote: >>>> On 2012-07-30 13:18, Michael Peters wrote: >>>>> On 07/30/2012 12:22 PM, tra...@sp... wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> [07/30/12 11:17:34] [asd] [critical] >>>>>> Krang::Schedule::Daemon->_child_work('asd'): Child PID=16044 >>>>>> encountered >>>>>> fatal error with Schedule ID=186 : >>>>>> Krang::Schedule::Action::publish->_publish(): error publishing >>>>>> Story >>>>>> ID=6332: ERR=Krang::Publisher::FileWriteError at >>>>>> /usr/local/krang/lib/Krang/Schedule/Action/publish.pm line 115. >>>>>> >>>>>> I assume it is permissions related, but all of the files are 775 >>>>>> krang:krang >>>>> >>>>> Which files? Are you talking about Krang's code files or the >>>>> location >>>>> of where it's trying to publish the site files. The 2nd is what >>>>> you >>>>> need to look at, not the 1st. And I'd be surprised if your >>>>> published >>>>> files had a mode of 755. >>>> >>>> The latter is what I am in need of. Do you know where Krang stores >>>> the >>>> files/stories it is trying to publish? I thought it was the data >>>> directory. >>> >>> No, that's where it stores things like templates and media files for >>> it's internal use. Where it publishes things is setup on a per site >>> basis and you'll need to view/edit that in the UI for the site. >>> >>>> Also, digging a bit deeper, I think I have an endian problem ... I >>>> get >>>> the following error when trying to preview pages. >>>> >>>> Byte order is not compatible at blib/lib/Storable.pm >>>> >>>> The old box was a Debian Sarge 3.1 i386 box ... the new box is a >>>> CentOS >>>> 4 x86_64 box. >>> >>> Did you just copy the krang code/library files over or did you do a >>> real >>> build/install of Krang there? >>> >>>> I wouldn't think this would be a problem between Linux distros >>>> though >>>> ... do you? >>> >>> 32bit and 64bit aren't binary compatible, so you can't just copy >>> binaries between (if that's what you did, not sure if you did that >>> or >>> not). Also, I'm not entirely sure that an old version of Krang like >>> that >>> will build on a 64 bit. >>> >> >> Looking at: >> >> http://www.krangcms.com/docs/changelog.html >> >> This was an issue first attached back in the 1.0 days (ahhh.. >> memories.). >> >> Following on what Michal said: If you copied in place, it won't work. >> The proper way to do this would be to create a new Krang install on >> your 64-bit box, use krang_export to export the data from your 32-bit >> box, and krang_import to pull it into your new server. >> >> From that point, I'd look at upgrading. 2.003 was released.. Well, >> I'm not entirely sure, but it had to be back in late 2004. >> >> Best, >> >> Peter > > I'll give the export/import a shot. I appreciate that advice. > > I did build Krang from source and then copied over the mysql and data. > > Thanks, > Travis > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Live Security Virtual Conference > Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and > threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions > will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware > threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/ > _______________________________________________ > Krang-general mailing list > Kra...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/krang-general |