6.3.
Health Page
The Health page displays the status of your Xeebra system.
The following checks are performed:
•
Check /etc/resolv.conf:
This checks that the DNS servers referenced in
/etc/resolv.conf
are
accessible. If not, you should change your
/etc/resolv.conf
(do not delete it), because having a
wrong
/etc/resolv.conf
is known to cause timeouts and can negatively impact the stability of
the stack.
•
Check disk free space:
It checks that you have enough disk space. If not, some files have to be
deleted, for example crash dumps can fill the
/var/crash
folder and can safely be deleted. For
other file systems, support from EVS may be needed.
•
Data RAID status:
It checks the software RAID. If this check fails, then the RAID is degraded and it is
likely that one disk is damaged and it might need to be replaced. It is recommended to take action
because if you lose another disk then you will lose the content and the system will not be available.
•
HDD disk health:
It checks the state of the internal disk.
•
Megaraid status:
It check for any problem with the LSI megaraid. If there is a problem, please
contact EVS support.
•
Serf Health Status:
It checks for a degraded service state. It should always be passing. If not, you
can try to restart it in a Terminal.
sudo systemctl restart consul
•
evs-sx-storage-status / evs-sxe-content / evs-sxe-ingest / evs-sxe-playout / evs-sxe-resource /
evs-sxe-sdi: It checks the status of these SxEngine services.
•
Soccer offside line service health:
It checks the status of the offside-line service.
•
Thinpool free space:
It checks the space available for the Docker backend storage. If this check is
not passing, please call EVS support as we might need to either free-up some space or allocate more
disk space.
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| March 2022 | Issue 2.6.G