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Running the server
a question
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Posted by
| Ithildin
USA (262 posts) bio
|
Date
| Tue 08 Jun 2004 10:06 PM (UTC) |
Message
| Ok, i'm looking into putting my mud on a server and i've been looking at different ones and such and looking at FAQs. i found this and i want to make sure on how exactly it starts and how i would stop if it happens.
Quote:
New admins generally
don't know how to keep tabs on a MUD, and often times will start the mud, see that it gets
stuck into a loop, panic, and log out, leaving the game to fill up the entire drive.
what would i need to do if this happens and how does it start?
Thanks,
Ithildin | top |
|
Posted by
| Nick Gammon
Australia (22,975 posts) bio
Forum Administrator |
Date
| Reply #1 on Wed 09 Jun 2004 01:36 AM (UTC) |
Message
| First, don't panic! ;)
The only way it is likely to "fill up a drive" is if the log file is written to with a great deal of information.
Normally your "startup" script would write to a log file. You could view that by using "tail". Using the -f option (follow) lets you view the data as it is written.
So, say you typed:
tail -f log/mylog.txt
and you saw heaps of things being written, much more than you expect, then you need to kill the process. One way of doing this is to use "ps" to find the process ID, like this:
$ ps aux | grep smaug
nick 30181 0.0 0.8 7584 5424 pts/1 S 07:28 0:00 ../src/smaug
nick 30430 0.0 0.0 3576 632 pts/3 S 11:07 0:00 grep smaug
In this case I am taking the output from "ps" and piping it through grep to narrow it down to the "smaug" entries. One of them (process ID 30430) is the grep command itself, so it follows that the other one (process ID 30181) is the actual SMAUG game (which you can see is running ../src/smaug).
Then type:
kill -9 30181
This kills process 30181 immediately. Then you would investigate why it is in the loop. If it isn't obvious you might use gdb rather than killing it. See my write-up on using gdb elsewhere on this site. In this case you would need to "attach" gdb to that process, eg.
gdb ../src/smaug 30181
Then type Ctrl+C to break into the running process and "bt" to get a backtrace, to see where the loop is. |
- Nick Gammon
www.gammon.com.au, www.mushclient.com | top |
|
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