NOTICE: This version of the NSF Unidata web site (archive.unidata.ucar.edu) is no longer being updated.
Current content can be found at unidata.ucar.edu.
To learn about what's going on, see About the Archive Site.
On Wed, 2 Sep 2015, Patrick L. Francis wrote:
The answer is we live in a world where there is no such thing as 3 identical machines. take 3 servers off a production line, install the same os in the same manner in the same way "something" will be different. anything from voltage variances (cpu mem) to drivers to bios to different feeds on each box. that "something" will often trigger "something" to occur, such as a buffer overflow. remove all those things which logically solve a problem, no matter how logical, only the illogical remain to explain the variant.
Yessir, and I will be doing a memory test to make sure it isn't bad! Gilbert ******************************************************************************* Gilbert Sebenste ******** (My opinions only!) ****** Staff Meteorologist, Northern Illinois University **** E-mail: sebenste@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx *** web: http://weather.admin.niu.edu ** Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/NIU_Weather ** Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/niu.weather * *******************************************************************************
ldm-users
archives: