Hi Dimitri,
> all ports are open. The script returns the following output:
> [root@pps-rb-fzk root]# ./check
> PID TTY TIME CMD
> 28051 ? 00:00:00 condor_collecto
> 28020 ? 00:00:00 condor_master
> 28060 ? 00:00:00 condor_negotiat
> 28052 ? 00:00:00 condor_schedd
> 29021 ? 00:00:00 glite-lb-bkserv
> 28567 ? 00:00:00 glite-lb-interl
> 28529 ? 00:00:00 glite-lb-logd
> 29091 ? 00:00:00 glite-lb-notif-
> 28423 ? 00:00:00 glite-lb-proxy
> 28238 ? 00:00:00 glite-proxy-ren
> 27980 ? 00:00:00 glite-wms-job_c
> 28053 ? 00:00:00 glite-wms-log_m
> 28141 ? 00:00:00 glite-wms-workl
> 16123 ? 00:00:00 glite_wms_wmpro
> 28253 ? 00:00:00 httpd
> 28294 ? 00:00:00 perl
>
> and it seems to be running on the right ports.
Can you run the attached script like this and send the output:
sh grep-err /var/log/messages* > /root/errs.txt
(Remove any sensitive stuff from the output.)
#!/bin/sh
errs="
abort
aborted
aborting
absent
alarm
are_not
aren't
bad
breaking
broken
can't
cannot
can_not
could
couldn't
denied
did_not
didn't
do_not
don't
does_not
doesn't
error
exception
expired
fail
failed
failure
fatal
fault
has_not
hasn't
have_not
haven't
illegal
invalid
is_not
isn't
kill
killed
killing
lost
missing
not_able
not_allowed
not_permitted
not_respond
not_responding
permission
problem
refused
refusing
severe
strange
such
unable
unknown
warn
warning
was_not
wasn't
were_not
weren't
wrong
"
pat='$.' # impossible to match
for i in $errs
do
pat="$i|$pat"
done
pat=`echo "$pat" | sed 's/_/ /g'`
pat="(^|[^-a-z0-9_])($pat)([^-a-z0-9_]|$)"
export LANG=C
exec egrep -i "$pat" ${1+"$@"}
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