[olug] Automating killing a *nix process from a windows box

T. J. Brumfield enderandrew at gmail.com
Tue Mar 23 16:08:25 UTC 2010


I completely agree, but we are such a Microsoft shop, that the few
people that are responsible for *nix systems seem to resent it, and
barely seem to know those systems.

Unfortunately, I don't own those boxes so I'm somewhat at their mercy.
I'm just responsible for supporting an application which depends on
databases on those boxes.

-- T. J.

On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 11:04 AM, Christopher Cashell
<topher-olug at zyp.org> wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 10:41 AM, T. J. Brumfield <enderandrew at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Here is the problem. We have error logs spitting out on Windows boxes
>> about GoldenGate processes locking up on a Solaris box. This is a
>> known bug that GoldenGate is hoping to fix in their next release. The
>> Solaris team has told me these logs aren't visible from the Solaris
>> boxes, despite the fact that is where GoldenGate is actually running.
>> I don't exactly believe that, but I have to go off what they tell me.
>
> How do the logs or log data get from the Solaris box to the Windows
> box?  Is it directly from a GoldenGate process on the Solaris box to
> some sort of GoldenGate process on the Windows box (not familiar with
> GoldenGate, so no idea how it operates or what it does)?  If it is
> purely within the application, then it is possible that the logs are
> never hitting the local system (maybe GoldenGate could be configured
> to log locally?).  However, if the logs are being transported via some
> non-application method (like syslog), then it should be possible to
> get the logs to the local system, even if they aren't being directed
> there now.
>
> Alternately, is there any way at all to recognize the locked process
> from the local Solaris box?  Something other than the logs on the
> Windows box?
>
> If it were me, I'd exhaust all possible solutions that could be
> contained on the Solaris box, just because it "feels" like solving it
> there would be a lot cleaner and more reliable (fewer moving parts).
>
>> -- T. J. Brumfield
>
> --
> Christopher
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