Sorry, was out this morning and just had a chance to look into this. I concur with Art and Gilbert that things appear to have gotten better starting with the failover of everything else to Boulder yesterday. I will also reconfigure to go back to a 5-way split
(as opposed to the 10-way split that I've been using since this issue began) and keep an eye on tomorrow's 12 UTC model run cycle - if the lags go up, it usually happens worst during that cycle, shortly before 18 UTC each day.
I'll report back tomorrow how it looks, or you can see at
Thanks,
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 4:04 PM
To: Gilbert Sebenste; Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate
Cc: address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
Anne,
I'll hop back in the loop here... for some reason these replies started going into my junk file (bleh). Anyway, I agree with Gilbert's assessment. Things
turned real clean around 12Z yesterday, looking at the graphs. I usually look at flood.atmos.uiuc.edu when there are problem as their connection always seems to be the cleanest. If there are even small blips or ups and downs in their latencies, that usually
means there's a network aberration somewhere that usually amplifies into hundreds or thousands of seconds at our site and elsewhere. Looking at their graph now, you can see the blipiness up until 12Z yesterday, and then it's flat (except for the one spike
around 16Z today which I would ignore):
Our direct-connected site, which is using a 10-way split right now, also shows a return to calmness in the latencies:
Prior to the recent latency jump, I did not use split requests and the reception had been stellar for quite some time. It's my suspicion that this is a networking congestion issue
somewhere close to the source since it seems to affect all downstream sites. For that reason, I don't think solving this problem should necessarily involve upgrading your server software, but rather identifying what's jamming up the network near D.C., and
testing this by switching to Boulder was an excellent idea. I will now try switching our system to a two-way split to see if this performance holds up with fewer pipes. Thanks for your help and I'll let you know what I find out.
Art
Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email: address@hidden,
phone: 814-863-1563
From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Gilbert Sebenste <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 4:07 PM
To: Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate
Cc: address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 10:03 AM Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate < address@hidden> wrote:
Hi Pete,
As of yesterday we failed almost all of our applications to our site in Boulder (meaning away from CONDUIT). Have you noticed an improvement in your speeds since yesterday afternoon? If so this will give us a clue that maybe there's something interfering
on our side that isn't specifically CONDUIT, but another app that might be causing congestion. (And if it's the same then that's a clue in the other direction.)
Thanks,
Anne
The lag here at UW-Madison was up to 1200 seconds today, and that's with a 10-way split feed. Whatever is causing the issue has definitely not been resolved, and historically is worse during the work week than on the weekends. If that helps at all.
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
From: Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden>
Sent: Thursday, March 28, 2019 4:28 PM
To: Person, Arthur A.
Cc: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal; Pete Pokrandt; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow;
address@hidden;
address@hidden
Subject: Re: [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
We will not be upgrading to version 6.13 on these systems as they are not robust enough to support the local logging inherent in the new version.
I will check in with my team on if there are any further actions we can take to try and troubleshoot this issue, but I fear we may be at the limit of our ability to make this better.
I’ll let you know tomorrow where we stand. Thanks.
Anne
On Mon, Mar 25, 2019 at 3:00 PM Person, Arthur A. < address@hidden> wrote:
Carissa,
Can you report any status on this inquiry?
Thanks... Art
Arthur
A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email: address@hidden,
phone: 814-863-1563
From: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal <address@hidden>
Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2019 8:30 AM
To: Pete Pokrandt
Cc: Person, Arthur A.;
address@hidden;
address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow
Subject: Re: Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
Hi Everyone
I’ve added the Dataflow team email to the thread. I haven’t heard that any changes were made or that any issues were found. But the team can look today and see if we have any signifiers of overall slowness with anything.
Dataflow, try taking a look at the new Citrix or VM troubleshooting tools if there are any abnormal signatures that may explain this.
On Monday, March 11, 2019, Pete Pokrandt < address@hidden> wrote:
Art,
I don't know if NCEP ever figured anything out, but I've been able to keep my latencies reasonable (300-600s max, mostly during the 12 UTC model suite) by splitting my CONDUIT request 10 ways, instead of the 5 that I had been doing, or in a single request.
Maybe give that a try and see if it helps at all.
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
From: Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden>
Sent: Monday, March 11, 2019 3:45 PM
To: Holly Uhlenhake - NOAA Federal; Pete Pokrandt
Cc: address@hidden;
address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
Holly,
Was there any resolution to this on the NCEP end? I'm still seeing terrible delays (1000-4000 seconds) receiving data from
conduit.ncep.noaa.gov. It would be helpful to know if things are resolved at NCEP's end so I know whether to look further down the line.
Thanks... Art
Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email: address@hidden,
phone: 814-863-1563
Hi Pete,
We'll take a look and see if we can figure out what might be going on. We haven't done anything to try and address this yet, but based on your analysis I'm suspicious that it might be tied to a resource constraint on the VM or the blade it resides on.
Thanks,
Holly Uhlenhake
Acting Dataflow Team Lead
On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 11:32 AM Pete Pokrandt < address@hidden> wrote:
Just FYI, data is flowing, but the large lags continue.
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
Data is flowing again - picked up somewhere in the GEFS. Maybe CONDUIT server was restarted, or ldm on it? Lags are large (3000s+) but dropping slowly
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
Just a quick follow-up - we started falling far enough behind (3600+ sec) that we are losing data. We got short files starting at 174h into the GFS run, and only got (incomplete) data through 207h.
We have now not received any data on CONDUIT since 11:27 AM CST (1727 UTC) today (Wed Feb 20)
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
Carissa,
We have been feeding CONDUIT using a 5 way split feed direct from
conduit.ncep.noaa.gov, and it had been really good for some time, lags 30-60 seconds or less.
However, the past week or so, we've been seeing some very large lags during each 6 hour model suite - Unidata is also seeing these - they are also feeding direct from
conduit.ncep.noaa.gov.
Any idea what's going on, or how we can find out?
Thanks!
Pete
--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
_______________________________________________
NOTE: All exchanges posted to Unidata maintained email lists are
recorded in the Unidata inquiry tracking system and made publicly
available through the web. Users who post to any of the lists we
maintain are reminded to remove any personal information that they
do not want to be made public.
conduit mailing list
address@hidden
For list information or to unsubscribe, visit:
http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/mailing_lists/
--
Carissa Klemmer
NCEP Central Operations
IDSB Branch Chief
301-683-3835
_______________________________________________
Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow mailing list
address@hidden
https://www.lstsrv.ncep.noaa.gov/mailman/listinfo/ncep.list.pmb-dataflow
--
Anne Myckow
Lead Dataflow Analyst
NOAA/NCEP/NCO
301-683-3825
--
Anne Myckow
Lead Dataflow Analyst
NOAA/NCEP/NCO
301-683-3825
_______________________________________________
NOTE: All exchanges posted to Unidata maintained email lists are
recorded in the Unidata inquiry tracking system and made publicly
available through the web. Users who post to any of the lists we
maintain are reminded to remove any personal information that they
do not want to be made public.
conduit mailing list
address@hidden
For list information or to unsubscribe, visit:
http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/mailing_lists/
--
----
Gilbert Sebenste
Consulting Meteorologist
AllisonHouse, LLC
|