mirror of
https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr.git
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b8b5038f71
Improves (but doesn't fix) #119 and #120.
434 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
434 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
# Troubleshooting <!-- omit in toc -->
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Here are some tips for diagnosing various problems with Moonfire NVR. Feel free
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to open an [issue](https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/issues) if you
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need more help.
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* [Viewing Moonfire NVR's logs](#viewing-moonfire-nvrs-logs)
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* [Flushes](#flushes)
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* [Panic errors](#panic-errors)
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* [Slow operations](#slow-operations)
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* [Camera stream errors](#camera-stream-errors)
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* [Problems](#problems)
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* [Server errors](#server-errors)
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* [Problems reading video from cameras](#problems-reading-video-from-cameras)
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* [`clock_gettime failed: EPERM: Operation not permitted`](#clock_gettime-failed-eperm-operation-not-permitted)
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* [`Error: pts not monotonically increasing; got 26615520 then 26539470`](#error-pts-not-monotonically-increasing-got-26615520-then-26539470)
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* [Out of disk space](#out-of-disk-space)
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* [Database or filesystem corruption errors](#database-or-filesystem-corruption-errors)
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* [Incorrect timestamps](#incorrect-timestamps)
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* [Configuration interface problems](#configuration-interface-problems)
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* [`moonfire-nvr config` displays garbage](#moonfire-nvr-config-displays-garbage)
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* [Browser user interface problems](#browser-user-interface-problems)
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* [Live stream always fails with `ws close: 1006`](#live-stream-always-fails-with-ws-close-1006)
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* [Errors in kernel logs](#errors-in-kernel-logs)
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* [UAS errors](#uas-errors)
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* [Filesystem errors](#filesystem-errors)
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## Viewing Moonfire NVR's logs
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While Moonfire NVR is running, logs will be written to stderr.
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* When running the configuration UI, you typically should redirect stderr
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to a text file to avoid poor interaction between the interactive stdout
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output and the logging. If you use the recommended
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`nvr config 2>debug-log` command, output will be in the `debug-log` file.
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* When running detached through Docker, Docker saves the logs for you.
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Try `nvr logs` or `docker logs moonfire-nvr`.
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* When running through systemd, stderr will be redirected to the journal.
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Try `sudo journalctl --unit moonfire-nvr` to view the logs. You also
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likely want to set `MOONFIRE_FORMAT=google-systemd` to format logs as
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expected by systemd.
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Logging options are controlled by environment variables:
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* `MOONFIRE_LOG` controls the log level. Its format is similar to the
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`RUST_LOG` variable used by the
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[env-logger](http://rust-lang-nursery.github.io/log/env_logger/) crate.
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`MOONFIRE_LOG=info` is the default.
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`MOONFIRE_LOG=info,moonfire_nvr=debug` gives more detailed logging of the
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`moonfire_nvr` crate itself.
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* `MOONFIRE_FORMAT` selects the output format. The two options currently
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accepted are `google` (the default, like the Google
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[glog](https://github.com/google/glog) package) and `google-systemd` (a
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variation for better systemd compatibility).
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* `MOONFIRE_COLOR` controls color coding when using the `google` format.
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It accepts `always`, `never`, or `auto`. `auto` means to color code if
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stderr is a terminal.
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* Errors include a backtrace if `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` is set.
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If you use Docker, set these via Docker's `--env` argument.
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With the default `MOONFIRE_FORMAT=google`, log lines are in the following
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format:
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```text
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I20210308 21:31:24.255 main moonfire_nvr] Success.
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LYYYYmmdd HH:MM:SS.FFF TTTT PPPPPPPPPPPP] ...
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L = level:
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E = error; when color mode is on, the message will be bright red.
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W = warn; " " " " " " " " " " yellow.
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I = info
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D = debug
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T = trace
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YYYY = year
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mm = month
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dd = day
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HH = hour (using a 24-hour clock)
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MM = minute
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SS = second
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FFF = fractional portion of the second
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TTTT = thread name (if set) or tid (otherwise)
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PPPP = log target (usually a module path)
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... = message body
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```
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Moonfire NVR names a few important thread types as follows:
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* `main`: during `moonfire-nvr run`, the main thread does initial setup then
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just waits for the other threads. In other subcommands, it does everything.
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* `s-CAMERA-TYPE` (one per stream, where `TYPE` is `main` or `sub`): these
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threads write video data to disk. When using `--rtsp-library=ffmpeg`, they
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also read the video data from the cameras via RTSP.
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* `sync-PATH` (one per sample file directory): These threads call `fsync` to
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* commit sample files to disk, delete old sample files, and flush the
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database.
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* `r-PATH` (one per sample file directory): These threads read sample files
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from disk for serving `.mp4` files.
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* `tokio-runtime-worker` (one per core, unless overridden with
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`--worker-threads`): these threads handle HTTP requests.
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When using `--rtsp-library=retina`, they also read video data from cameras
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via RTSP.
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* `logger`: this thread writes the log buffer to `stderr`. Logging is
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asynchronous; other threads don't wait for log messages to be written
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unless the log buffer is full.
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You can use the following command to teach [`lnav`](http://lnav.org/) Moonfire
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NVR's log format:
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```
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$ lnav -i misc/moonfire_log.json
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```
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`lnav` versions prior to 0.9.0 print a (harmless) warning message on startup:
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```
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$ lnav -i git/moonfire-nvr/misc/moonfire_log.json
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warning:git/moonfire-nvr/misc/moonfire_log.json:line 2
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warning: unexpected path --
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warning: /$schema
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warning: accepted paths --
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warning: /(?<format_name>\w+)/ -- The definition of a log file format.
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info: installed: /home/slamb/.lnav/formats/installed/moonfire_log.json
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```
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You can avoid this by removing the `$schema` line from `moonfire_log.json`
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and rerunning the `lnav -i` command.
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Below are some interesting log lines you may encounter.
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### Flushes
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During normal operation, Moonfire NVR will periodically flush changes to its
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SQLite3 database. Every flush is logged, as in the following info message:
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```
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I20210308 23:14:18.388 sync-/media/14tb/sample moonfire_db::db] Flush 3810 (why: 120 sec after start of 1 minute 14 seconds courtyard-main recording 3/1842086):
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/media/6tb/sample: added 98M 864K 842B in 8 recordings (4/1839795, 7/1503516, 6/1853939, 1/1838087, 2/1852096, 12/1516945, 8/1514942, 10/1506111), deleted 111M 435K 587B in 5 (4/1801170, 4/1801171, 6/1799708, 1/1801528, 2/1815572), GCed 9 recordings (6/1799707, 7/1376577, 4/1801168, 1/1801527, 4/1801167, 4/1801169, 10/1243252, 2/1815571, 12/1418785).
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/media/14tb/sample: added 8M 364K 643B in 3 recordings (3/1842086, 9/1505359, 11/1516695), deleted 0B in 0 (), GCed 0 recordings ().
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```
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This log message is packed with debugging information:
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* the date and time: `20210308 23:14:18.388`.
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* the name of the thread that prompted the flush: `sync-/media/14tb/sample`.
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* a sequence number: `3810`. This is handy for checking how often Moonfire NVR
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is flushing.
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* a reason for the flush: `120 sec after start of 1 minute 14 seconds courtyard-main recording 3/1842086`.
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This was a regular periodic flush at the `flush_if_sec` for the stream,
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as described in [install.md](install.md). `3/1842086` is an identifier for
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the recording, in the form `stream_id/recording_id`. It corresponds to the
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file `/media/14tb/sample/00000003001c1ba6`. On-disk files are named by
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a fixed eight hexadecimal digits for the stream id and eight hexadecimal
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digits for the recording id. You can convert with `printf`:
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```
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$ printf '%08x%08x\n' 3 1842086
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00000003001c1ba6
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```
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* For each affected sample file directory (`/media/6tb/sample` and
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`/media/14tb/sample`), a line showing the exact changes included in the
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flush. There are three kinds of changes:
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* added recordings–these files are already fully written in the sample
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file directory and now are being added to the database.
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* deleted recordings–these are being removed from the database's
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`recording` table (and added to the `garbage` table) in preparation
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for being deleted from the sample file directory. They can no longer
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be accessed after this flush.
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* GCed (garbage-collected) recordings—these have been fully removed from
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disk and no longer will be referenced in the database at all.
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You can learn more about these in the "Lifecycle of a recording" section
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of the [recording schema design document](../design/schema.md).
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For added and deleted recordings, the line includes sizes in bytes
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(`98M 864K 842B` represents 10,3646,026 bytes, or about 99 MiB), numbers
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of recordings, and the IDs of each recording. For GCed recordings, the
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sizes are omitted (as this information is not stored).
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### Panic errors
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Errors like the one below indicate a serious bug in Moonfire NVR. Please
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file a bug if you see one. It's helpful to set the `RUST_BACKTRACE`
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environment variable to include more information.
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```
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E20210304 11:09:29.230 main s-peck_west-main] panic at 'src/moonfire-nvr/server/db/writer.rs:750:54': should always be an unindexed sample
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(set environment variable RUST_BACKTRACE=1 to see backtraces)"
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```
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In this case, a stream thread (one starting with `s-`) panicked. That stream
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won't record again until Moonfire NVR is restarted.
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### Slow operations
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Warnings like the following indicate that some operation took more than 1
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second to perform. `PT2.070715796S` means about 2 seconds.
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It's normal to see these warnings on startup and occasionally while running.
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Frequent occurrences may indicate a performance problem.
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```
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W20201129 12:01:21.128 s-driveway-main moonfire_base::clock] opening rtsp://admin:redacted@192.168.5.108/cam/realmonitor?channel=1&subtype=0&unicast=true&proto=Onvif took PT2.070715796S!
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W20201129 12:32:15.870 s-west_side-sub moonfire_base::clock] getting next packet took PT10.158121387S!
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W20201228 12:09:29.050 s-back_east-sub moonfire_base::clock] database lock acquisition took PT8.122452
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W20201228 21:22:32.012 main moonfire_base::clock] database operation took PT39.526386958S!
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W20201228 21:27:11.402 s-driveway-sub moonfire_base::clock] writing 37 bytes took PT20.701894190S!
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```
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### Camera stream errors
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Warnings like the following indicate that a camera stream was lost due to some
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error and Moonfire NVR will try reconnecting shortly. In this case,
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`End of file` means that the camera ended the stream. This might happen when the
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camera is rebooting or if Moonfire is not consuming packets quickly enough.
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In the latter case, you'll likely see a `getting next packet took PT...S!`
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message as described above.
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```
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W20210309 00:28:55.527 s-courtyard-sub moonfire_nvr::streamer] courtyard-sub: sleeping for Duration { secs: 1, nanos: 0 } after error: End of file
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(set environment variable RUST_BACKTRACE=1 to see backtraces)
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```
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## Problems
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### Server errors
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#### Problems reading video from cameras
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Moonfire NVR is switching its RTSP handling from ffmpeg to a pure-Rust
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library developed by Moonfire NVR's author. If it doesn't read camera
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data successfully, please try restarting with `--rtsp-library=ffmpeg` to see
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if the problem goes away. Then please file a bug!
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#### `clock_gettime failed: EPERM: Operation not permitted`
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If commands fail with an error like the following, you're likely running
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Docker with an overly restrictive `seccomp` setup. [This stackoverflow
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answer](https://askubuntu.com/questions/1263284/apt-update-throws-signature-error-in-ubuntu-20-04-container-on-arm/1264921#1264921) describes the
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problem in more detail. The simplest solution is to add
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`--security-opt=seccomp:unconfined` to your Docker commandline.
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If you are using the recommended `/usr/local/bin/nvr` wrapper script,
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add this option to the `common_docker_run_args` section.
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```
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$ docker run --rm -it moonfire-nvr:latest
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clock_gettime failed: EPERM: Operation not permitted
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This indicates a broken environment. See the troubleshooting guide.
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```
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#### `Error: pts not monotonically increasing; got 26615520 then 26539470`
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If your streams cut out and you see error messages like this one in Moonfire
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NVR logs, it might mean that your camera outputs [B
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frames](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_compression_picture_types#Bi-directional_predicted_.28B.29_frames.2Fslices_.28macroblocks.29).
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If you believe this is the case, file a feature request; Moonfire NVR
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currently doesn't support B frames. You may be able to configure your camera
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to disable B frames in the meantime.
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#### Out of disk space
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If Moonfire NVR runs out of disk space on a sample file directory, recording
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will be stuck and you'll see log messages like the following:
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```
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W20210401 11:21:07.365 s-driveway-main moonfire_base::clock] sleeping for Duration { secs: 1, nanos: 0 } after error: No space left on device (os error 28)
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```
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If something else used more disk space on the filesystem than planned, just
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clean up the excess files. Moonfire NVR will start working again immediately.
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If Moonfire NVR's own files are too large, follow this procedure:
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1. Shut it down via `SIGKILL`:
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```
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$ sudo killall -KILL moonfire-nvr
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```
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(Be sure to use `-KILL`. It won't shut down properly on `SIGTERM` or `SIGINT`
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when out of disk space due to [issue
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#117](https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/issues/117).)
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2. Reconfigure it use less disk space. See [Completing configuration through
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the UI](install.md#completing-configuration-through-the-ui) in the
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installation guide. Pay attention to the note about slack space.
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3. Start Moonfire NVR again. It will clean up the excess disk files on
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startup and should run properly.
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#### Database or filesystem corruption errors
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It's helpful to check out your system's overall health when diagnosing
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this kind of problem with Moonfire NVR.
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1. Look at your kernel logs. On most Linux systems, you can browse them via
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`journalctl`, `dmesg`, or `less /var/log/messages`. See [Errors in kernel
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logs](#errors-in-kernel-logs) below for some common problems.
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2. Use [`smartctl`](https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-check-an-hard-drive-health-from-the-command-line-using-smartctl) to
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look at SMART ("Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology System
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(SMART)") attributes on your flash and hard drives. Backblaze
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[reports](https://www.backblaze.com/blog/what-smart-stats-indicate-hard-drive-failures/)
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that the following SMART attributes are most predictive of drive failure:
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* SMART 5: Reallocated Sectors Count
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* SMART 187: Reported Uncorrectable Errors
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* SMART 188: Command Timeout
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* SMART 197: Current Pending Sector Count
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* SMART 198: Uncorrectable Sector Count
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If the RAW value for any of these attributes is non-zero, it's likely
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your problem is due to hardware.
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3. Use `smartctl` to run a self-test on your flash and hard drives.
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4. Run `fsck` on your filesystems.
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Your root filesystem is best checked on startup, before it's mounted as
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read-write. On most Linux systems, you can force `fsck` to run on next
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startup via the `fsck.mode=force` kernel parameter, as documented
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[here](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-fsck@.service.html).
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If you have hard drives dedicated to Moonfire NVR, you can also shut down
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Moonfire NVR, unmount the filesystem, and run `fsck` on them without
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rebooting.
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After the system as a whole is verified healthy, run `moonfire-nvr check` while
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Moonfire NVR is stopped to verify integrity of the SQLite database and sample
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file directories.
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#### Incorrect timestamps
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Moonfire NVR uses the system clock when a run of recordings starts to determine
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the run's initial timestamp. If the system clock is stepped after the run
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starts, Moonfire NVR will keep using timestamps based on the old (usually
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incorrect) setting.
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This is most noticeable on the Raspberry Pi or other cheap SBCs which don't
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come with a battery-backed real-time clock (RTC). Instead, they save the
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current time periodically and restore it on bootup. Their clocks often are a
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few hours behind on startup following a power outage. You may notice in
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`journalctl` logs messages similar to the following when the clock is fixed:
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```
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Aug 14 21:05:51 moonfire moonfire-nvr[710]: Aug 14 21:05:51.538 INFO reserved 590d892d-b2e8-4e6c-9e1b-c4418d0abd69
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Aug 14 22:37:39 moonfire systemd[1]: Time has been changed
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Aug 14 22:38:48 moonfire moonfire-nvr[710]: Aug 14 22:38:48.965 INFO Committing extra transaction because there's no cached uuid
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```
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Note the 1.5-hour gap between messages; this is roughly how much the clock was
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adjusted.
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The exact message may differ based on your Linux distribution and message;
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here's another variation:
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```
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Jul 13 10:05:52 pi4 systemd-timesyncd[340]: Synchronized to time server for the first time [2600:3c00::e:d0bb]:123 (2.debian.pool.ntp.org).
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```
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Here's what you can do:
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* *recover*: restart Moonfire NVR to pick up the new timestamp.
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* *prevent*: add a RTC module or fresh battery so your clock is correct
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at boot time. There's a
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[guide](https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/wiki/System-setup#realtime-clock-on-raspberry-pi)
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on the wiki.
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Currently Moonfire NVR doesn't have any logic to detect this happening or
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mechanism to fix old timestamps after the fact. Ideas and help welcome; see
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[issue #9](https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/issues/9).
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### Configuration interface problems
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#### `moonfire-nvr config` displays garbage
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This happens if you're not using the premade Docker containers and have
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configured your machine is configured to a non-UTF-8 locale, due to
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gyscos/Cursive#13. As a workaround, try setting the environment variable
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`LC_ALL=C.UTF-8`.
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### Browser user interface problems
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#### Live stream always fails with `ws close: 1006`
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Moonfire NVR's UI uses a
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[WebSocket](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WebSockets_API)
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connection to the server for the live view. If you see an alert in the lower
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left corner of a live stream area that says `ws close: 1006`, this means that
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the WebSocket connection failed. Unfortunately this is all the UI knows;
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the WebSocket spec [deliberately withholds](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/web-sockets.html#closeWebSocket) additional debugging information
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for security reasons.
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You might be able to learn more through your browser's Javascript console.
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If you consistently see this error when other parts of the UI work properly,
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here are some things to check:
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* If you are using Safari and haven't logged out since Moonfire NVR v0.6.3
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was released, try logging out and back in. Safari apparently doesn't send
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[`SameSite=Strict`
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cookies](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Set-Cookie/SameSite#strict)
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on WebSocket requests. Since v0.6.3, Moonfire NVR uses `SameSite=Lax`
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instead.
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* If you are using a proxy server, check that it is properly configured for
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Websockets. In particular, if you followed the [Securing Moonfire NVR
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guide](schema.md) prior to 29 Feb 2020, look at [this
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update](https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/commit/92266612b5c9163eb6096c580ba751280a403648#diff-e8bdd96dda101a25a541a6629675ea46bd6eaf670c6417c76662db5397c50c19)
|
||
to those instructions.
|
||
|
||
### Errors in kernel logs
|
||
|
||
#### UAS errors
|
||
|
||
Some cheap USB SATA adapters don't appear to work reliably in UAS mode under
|
||
Linux. If you see errors like the following, try [disabling
|
||
UAS](https://github.com/scottlamb/moonfire-nvr/wiki/System-setup#disable-uas).
|
||
Unfortunately your filesystem is likely to have corruption, so after disabling UAS,
|
||
run a `fsck` and then `moonfire-nvr check` to try recovering.
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
Sep 22 17:26:01 nuc kernel: sd 4:0:0:1: [sdb] tag#2 uas_eh_abort_handler 0 uas-tag 3 inflight: CMD OUT
|
||
Sep 22 17:26:01 nuc kernel: sd 4:0:0:1: [sdb] tag#2 CDB: Write(16) 8a 00 00 00 00 01 4d b4 c4 00 00 00 03 b0 00 00
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
#### Filesystem errors
|
||
|
||
Errors that mention `EXT4-fs` (or your filesystem of choice) likely indicate
|
||
filesystem corruption. Run `fsck` to fix as described above. Once the
|
||
corruption is addressed, use `moonfire-nvr check` to survey the damage to
|
||
your database.
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
Jan 28 07:26:27 nuc kernel: EXT4-fs (sdc1): error count since last fsck: 12
|
||
Jan 28 07:26:27 nuc kernel: EXT4-fs (sdc1): initial error at time 1576998292: ext4_validate_block_bitmap:376
|
||
Jan 28 07:26:27 nuc kernel: EXT4-fs (sdc1): last error at time 1579640202: ext4_validate_block_bitmap:376
|
||
...
|
||
Feb 13 04:48:43 nuc kernel: EXT4-fs error (device sdc1): ext4_validate_block_bitmap:376: comm kworker/u8:2: bg 57266: bad block bitmap checksum
|
||
Feb 13 04:48:43 nuc kernel: EXT4-fs (sdc1): Delayed block allocation failed for inode 7334278 at logical offset 0 with max blocks 11 with error 74
|
||
Feb 13 04:48:43 nuc kernel: EXT4-fs (sdc1): This should not happen!! Data will be lost
|
||
```
|