Troubleshooting

Logging

Starting with 2.4.0, Pulp uses syslog by default for its log messages. Other options are available and you can find the setting for your system in /etc/pulp/server.conf. How to read Pulp’s log messages therefore depends on which log handler your configuration specifies and how your operating system implements that configuration. Two different log handlers that are commonly used will be documented here: syslog and console.

Syslog

The two common syslog utilities covered in this guide are journald and rsyslog. If you happen to use a different syslog handler on your operating system, please refer to its documentation to learn how to access Pulp’s log messages.

journald

journald is the logging daemon that is distributed as part of systemd. If you are using Fedora this is your primary logging daemon, though it’s possible that you also have rsyslogd installed. journald is a very nice logging daemon that provides a very useful interface to the logs, journalctl. If your system uses journald, you might not have any logs written to /var/log depending on how your system is configured. For Pulp’s purposes, you should use journalctl to access Pulp’s various logs. Most of the log messages that you will wish to see will have the “pulp” tag on them, so this command will display most of Pulp’s log messages:

$ sudo journalctl SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER=pulp

We’ll leave it to the systemd team to thoroughly document journalctl, but it’s worth mentioning that it can be used to aggregate the logs from Pulp’s various processes together into one handy view using it’s + operator. Pulp server runs in a variety of units, and if there are problems startinudo journalctl SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER=pulp + SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER=celery + SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER=httpd

A journalctl flag to know about is -f, which performs a similar function as tail’s -f flag.

rsyslogd

rsyslogd is another popular logging daemon. If you are using RHEL 6, this is your logging daemon. On many distributions, it is configured to log most messages to /var/log/messages. If this is your logging daemon, it is likely that all of Pulp’s logs will go to this file by default. If you wish to filter Pulp’s log messages out and place them into a separate file, you will need to configure rsyslogd to match Pulp’s messages. Pulp prefixes all of its log messages with “pulp” to aid in matching its messages in the logging daemon.

If you wish to match Pulp messages and have them logged to a different file than /var/log/messages, you may adjust your /etc/rsyslog.conf. See RSyslog for details. An alternative could be to use tail and grep to view Pulp messages logged to /var/log/messages.

Other logs

Some of Pulp’s other processes still log to files. Those file locations are documented here.

/var/log/pulp/celerybeat.log, /var/log/pulp/reserved_resource_worker-*.log, /var/log/pulp/resource_manager.log

All of these files will only be present if your operating system uses Upstart for init. If you use systemd, these log messages will all be sent to the syslog by the Celery units.

These files will contain messages from Celery’s early startup, before it initializes the Pulp application. If there are problems loading Pulp, Celery will log those problems here. Once Pulp initializes, it begins capturing all of the Celery logs and writing them to syslog.

/var/log/httpd/error_log
This is where Apache will log errors that the Pulp server itself did not handle. Bootstrap errors often get logged here.
/var/log/httpd/ssl_error_log
This is where Apache will log errors that the Pulp server itself did not handle. 5xx level HTTP response codes generally get logged here, often with a stack trace or other information that can help a developer determine what went wrong.
~/.pulp/consumer.log
pulp-consumer logs its activity here.
~/.pulp/consumer_server_calls.log
HTTP requests and responses get logged by the consumer client in this file. To enable/disable this, consult the [logging] section of /etc/pulp/consumer/consumer.conf.

Common Issues

The server hostname configured on the client did not match the name found in the server’s SSL certificate

In some distributions, such as RHEL 6.3 and Fedora 17, the default SSL certificate used by Apache is created with its Common Name set to the hostname of the machine. This can cause Pulp to return an error similar to The server hostname configured on the client did not match the name found in the server's SSL certificate.

If you want to connect to localhost, you need to regenerate this certificate, which is stored in /etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt. For testing purposes, delete it, then run make testcert. Be sure to answer “localhost” for the “Common Name”. Other responses do not matter.

For production installations of Pulp, it is up to the installer to provide appropriate SSL certificates and configure Apache to use them.

Sync from within /tmp fails to find files

If you experience a problem where Pulp cannot find content that is in /tmp, please move that content outside of /tmp and try again.

A sync operation can use a local filesystem path on the server by specifying the feed URL starting with file:///. If the content is within /tmp, Apache may fail to read that content on distributions such as Fedora that use private /tmp directories. Since /tmp is temporary and may not persist through a system reboot, it is not generally the best place to put important content anyway.

apr_sockaddr_info_get() failed error when starting apache on F18

You may run into apr_sockaddr_info_get() failed error when starting apache on F18. This is because of incorrect hostname configuration. Make sure your /etc/hosts file contains the hostname of your machine as returned by the ‘hostname’ command. If not, update /etc/hosts and run ‘apachectl restart’.

Qpid connection issues when starting services or executing tasks

When setting up Pulp, or adjusting its configuration, you may encounter connection issues between Pulp and Qpid. If Pulp services cannot connect to the Qpid broker then Pulp cannot continue. The most common root cause of this issue is the Qpid broker not being configured as expected due to changes being put into a qpidd.conf that the Qpid broker is not reading from. For Qpid 0.24+ the qpidd.conf file should be located at /etc/qpid/qpidd.conf and for earlier Qpid versions, it should be located at /etc/qpidd.conf. The user who you run qpidd as must be able to read the qpidd.conf file.

I see ‘NotFound: no such queue: pulp.task’ in the logs

This is experienced on a Pulp installation that uses Qpid 0.18 or earlier, and does not have the qpid-cpp-server-store package installed with their broker. Later version of Qpid do not require this package to be installed. This exception may not occur until the Qpid broker is restarted unexpectedly with other Pulp services running. The exception is shown as Pulp recovers from a Qpid availability issue.

Tasks are accepted but never run

Starting with Pulp 2.6.0, any pulp-admin or API action that creates a Pulp Task will be accepted without error as long as the webserver is running. Once those tasks are accepted, they wait to be executed through a coordination between the non-webserver components: pulp_celerybeat, pulp_resource_manager, and pulp_workers. If your tasks are being accepted but not running, ensure that you have pulp_celerybeat, pulp_resource_manager, and pulp_workers configured and running correctly. If you are using systemd, please see the special note about pulp_workers below.

Note

If you are using systemd, the pulp_workers service is really a proxy that starts pulp_worker-0, pulp_worker-1, pulp_worker-2… and so forth, depending on the number of workers you have configured. systemctl status pulp_workers will not report status on the real workers, but rather will report status on itself. Therefore if you see a successful status from pulp_workers it only means that it was able to start pulp_worker-0, pulp_worker-1, etc. It does not mean that those services are still running. It is possible to ask for pulp_worker statuses using wildcards, such as systemctl status pulp_worker-\* -a, for example.

qpid.messaging is not installed

If you are using Qpid as your message broker, you will need the Python package qpid.messaging. On Red Hat operating systems, this is provided by the python-qpid package.

qpidtoollibs is not installed

If you are using Qpid as your message broker, you will also need the Python package qpidtoollibs. On Red Hat operating systems this is provided by either the qpid-tools package or the python-qpid-qmf package, depending on the versions of qpid you are using (newer qpid versions provide it with qpid-tools.)

pulp-manage-db gives an error “Cannot delete queue”

While running pulp-manage-db, you may see “Cannot delete queue xxxxxxxxxxxxxx; queue in use”.

You will encounter this while upgrading to Pulp 2.4.0 if there are still 2.3.x or earlier consumers running. All consumers must be upgraded first, or turned off, prior to running the pulp-manage-db that is part of the Pulp 2.3.x –> 2.4.0 upgrade. For more information see the Pulp 2.3.x –> 2.4.0 upgrade docs.

Cannot start/stop Qpid – Not enough file descriptors or AIO contexts

In environments with a very large number of Consumers, Pulp relies on the broker to manage a large number of persistent queues. Pulp installations that have a very large number of consumers and are using Qpid may experience issues when starting or stopping qpidd.

If you experience an issue starting or stopping qpidd that complains about file descriptors or AIO contexts, you probably have encountered a scalability limit within Qpid. If you experience this issue you can:

  1. Ensure you are running the latest version of Qpid that is available to you. An improvement was made in Qpid 0.30 that improves its scalability of Qpid in this area.
  2. Follow the Qpid scalability guide for configuring Qpid to handle a large number of persistent queues.
  3. Consider spreading your consumers over multiple Pulp installations, each with its own Qpid broker to reduce the number of Pulp Consumers per broker. The Pulp nodes feature should make this architecture manageable.

User permissions not behaving as expected

Resource names should always start with /v2 and end with a trailing /. For example, the following command will add a permission to test-user to create repositories:

pulp-admin auth permission grant --resource /v2/repositories/ --login test-user -o create

Pulp workers not starting due to Permission Denied Exception

Pulp workers attempt create working directory on startup. The path for working directories is defined by the working_directory config in server section of /etc/pulp/server.conf. The default value is /var/cache/pulp. Any user defined path needs to be owned by user and group apache. If running with SELinux in Enforcing mode, the path also needs to have system_u:object_r:pulp_var_cache_t security context.

Celery terminates the worker in case of sync cancellation.

For some plugin types, if the syncronization of the repo is cancelled, the worker process exits immediately with sys.exit(). A new worker process is created immediately, so further tasks are normally picked up and executed.

Celery logs this behaviour and you can observe the traceback, which states that no further work can be done by that worker. This is normal for cancellation and is not a cause for concern.

celery.worker.job:ERROR: (15328-02560) Task pulp.server.managers.repo.sync.sync[049a534c-6bb1-4329-87c1-66b453348ba4] raised unexpected: Terminated(0,)
celery.worker.job:ERROR: (15328-02560) Traceback (most recent call last):
celery.worker.job:ERROR: (15328-02560)   File "/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/billiard/pool.py", line 1673, in _set_terminated
celery.worker.job:ERROR: (15328-02560)     raise Terminated(-(signum or 0))
celery.worker.job:ERROR: (15328-02560) Terminated: 0

Workers not releasing memory

See the process recycling documentation for more information on how to have your Pulp workers return memory back to the system.