Hello folks,
I just came across the second occurrence where the database file
"/var/opt/CPmds-R77/conf/mdsdb/CPMILinksMgr.db" filled up the root partition to 100%...taking up 80GB of space (all there was to take), causing the system to react very slow or rendered it even unresponsive.
The systems being affected so far were a MDS the first time (file size of 96GB) and a MLM the second time (file size of 80GB). All of them being part of a single MDM site with 10 Domains and ~26 FW Clusters spread among them.
primary MDS: R77.30 JHF 292, 128GB RAM, ~6TB HDD, root partition size: 128GB
one of two MLM: R77.30 JHF 292, 256GB RAM, ~12TB HDD, root partition size: 97GB
Removing the file after stopping the MDS services, does help but is only delaying the inevitable.
The file is getting huge no matter which MGMT system I check. The other MDM systems are reporting sizes between 20 to 50+ GB in size. Not critical but far from looking healthy/good/normal.
My questions about "CPMILinksMgr.db" are:
- What does increase the size?
-- Under which circumstances does the file size increase?
-- How can the size increase be controlled?
- Why is the file not decreasing in size on its own?
-- Or under which circumstances would it shrink?
-- If so, wow could these circumstances be provoked?
- Is there a prediction possible to what size the file can or would increase? Like: Number of users connecting using the SmartDomain Manager/Dashboard multiplied by xyzGB, plus the number of domains/gateways/etc. being actively managed multiplied by xyzGB to the power of the number of database objects, etc., etc.
All I found out so far: The file size does not relate to the distance Halley's Comet has to earth.
TIP:
Make sure you do follow the proper procedure (sk100507) of removing CPMILinksMgr.db before backing up any MGMT system. In my case 80GB of this file was taking up >4GB in compressed form. Restoring a backup would require the uncompressed amount of space of the file. Not to mention this file alone taking a long time to be processed.
Thanks in advance for your insight
Best regards
Carsten