boinc/doc/server_debug.php

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1.8 KiB
PHP

<?php
require_once("docutil.php");
page_head("Debugging server components");
echo "
<p>
A grab-bag of techniques for debugging BOINC server software:
<h2>Log files</h2>
Most error conditions are reported in the log files.
Make sure you know where these are.
If you're interested in the history of a particular WU or result,
grep for WU#12345 or RESULT#12345 (12345 represents the ID)
in the log files.
The html/ops pages also provide an interface for this.
<h2>Database query tracing</h2>
If you uncomment the symbol SHOW_QUERIES in db/db_base.C,
and recompile everything,
all database queries will be written to stderr
(for daemons, this goes to log files;
for command-line apps it's written to your terminal).
This is verbose but extremely useful for tracking down
database-level problems.
<h2>Scheduler single-stepping</h2>
The scheduler is a CGI program.
It reads from stdin and writes to stdout,
so you can also run it with a command-line debugger like gdb:
<ul>
<li>
Copy the \"scheduler_request_X.xml\" file from a client to the
machine running the scheduler. (X = your project URL)
<li>
Run the scheduler under the debugger, giving it this file as stdin,
i.e.:
<pre>
gdb cgi
(set a breakpoint)
r &lt; scheduler_request_X.xml
</pre>
<li>
You may have to doctor the database as follows:
<pre>
update host set rpc_seqno=0, rpc_time=0 where hostid=N
</pre>
to keep the scheduler from rejecting the request.
</ul>
This is useful for figuring out why your project is generating
'no work available' messages.
<h2>MySQL interfaces</h2>
You should become familiar with MySQL tools such as
<ul>
<li> mytop: like 'top' for MySQL
<li> the mysql interpreter ('mysql') and in particular
the 'show processlist;' query.
<li> MySQLadmin: general-purpose web interface to MySQL
</ul>
";
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