In the beginning!
Linux has been around for a long time, most of the web runs on Linux, FreeBSD. Linux is everywhere, but there is a lot of things under the surface that one has to learn when troubleshooting Linux servers. Let's see some of the commands I used to use when I was doing Techsupport for Customers.
Commands
netcat/nc
Customers often say that my domain isn't working on say a certain port, or the customer needs to host an application on a port but it's not working
$ sudo nc --verbose google.com 443
Ncat: Connected to 216.58.203.14:443.
Ncat: 0 bytes sent, 0 bytes received in 0.10 seconds.
--verbose Verbose output
-z Zero-I/O mode, report connection status only
ss
From the manpage(cause even I didn't know this) ss - another utility to investigate sockets
, say you have an application running on port 9001
how do you know if it's actually listening to connections and how do you know if it's listening on all interfaces(0.0.0.0)? ss
helps you figure that out.
ss -patun | grep -w 9001
tcp LISTEN 0 4096 *:9001 *:* users:(("rootlessport",pid=691027,fd=11))
As you can see this command gives you the Protocol
,If it's listening or not, the interface(*9001
is for all) and also the application that is using it along with the Process ID(PID) and File Descriptor(FD).
Atop
Ever had a customers server or your server gone out of memory, and nothing could pinpoint the reason? Atop solves that for you, by default Linux servers do not store any history of the processes, atop does.
vmstat, pidstat, iostat.
Vmstat will display all the virtual memory stats
Vmstat output details
vmstat -w -S M 1 9
--procs-- -----------------------memory---------------------- ---swap-- -----io---- -system-- --------cpu--------
r b swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id wa st
2 0 3545 5650 121 3052 0 0 69 183 61 216 22 9 68 0 0
0 0 3545 5649 121 3052 0 0 0 1556 1466 4690 2 2 96 0 0
0 0 3545 5649 121 3053 0 0 0 108 1160 4263 1 1 98 0 0
0 0 3545 5649 121 3052 0 0 0 68 1584 5925 2 1 96 0 0
0 0 3545 5648 121 3052 0 0 0 20 1213 4872 1 1 98 0 0
0 0 3545 5649 121 3052 0 0 0 0 995 4079 1 1 99 0 0
1 0 3545 5650 121 3052 0 0 0 88 1465 5533 2 1 97 0 0
0 0 3545 5650 121 3052 0 0 0 0 1290 5131 1 1 98 0 0
0 0 3545 5650 121 3052 0 0 0 96 1855 6303 2 2 96 0 0
Then there is iostat
that will give you details about the I/O pressure and cache
avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle
22.3% 0.0% 9.2% 0.1% 0.0% 68.4%
tps kB_read/s kB_wrtn/s kB_dscd/s kB_read kB_wrtn kB_dscd Device
7.09 29.8k 143.2k 0.0k 5.4G 26.1G 0.0k sda
1.74 33.9k 25.6k 0.0k 6.2G 4.7G 0.0k sdb
More details here
And then there is pidstat
which will give you process statistics, such as which process is taking a lot of memory and CPU More Details
There are many such tools in the sysstat
package
There is a really nice article by Netflix read it here
Using the system journal correctly will save you a lot of headache.
Few Journal commands I use
journalctl --since=today -g oom
This will essentially do a journal grep for the keyword oom
no more journalctl | grep
please.
journalctl -t httpd.service --since=today
This will give you details about the httpd service only.
Checking Disk space.
This is often looked over, the quickest way to check disk space is
$ df -Th
That's it nothing more.
Need to find files that are occupying disk? Not an issue.
$ sudo du -ach / | awk '$1 ~/[G]/ {print}'
This will print files that are in GB's, you can also use find for finding files.
top
The easiest way to check server load is by launching the top command the top command is an essential tool in Linux troubleshooting.
Checking Server port usage.
If you ever notice a random port and you want to know what process is occupying it and the list of files open, simply run.
lsof -i :9001
Checking DNS resolution
DNS is something that is the most important thing when it comes to servers and domains.
dig a domain.com
;; ANSWER SECTION:
google.com. 188 IN A 142.250.76.206
Will tell you if your DNS resolution is working
Checking How much Memory is left
The free
command is used to check the memory usage
free -h
total used free shared buff/cache available
Mem: 15Gi 7.2Gi 4.5Gi 1.5Gi 3.6Gi 6.2Gi
Swap: 10Gi 3.4Gi 7.4Gi
That's all, there are probably a few more commands I use, in case I remember them I will let you all know.
In case you would like to chat with me or have a discussion I'm always available at @mediocreDevops
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