[SOLVED] My proxmox VE is crashing

Tiegertropfen119

New Member
Apr 8, 2021
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Hello I have a problem with my Proxmox VE server my server crash every day

I've already tried to update it but without success

IMG_20210411_133835.jpg


9rvz9e8q.png



/var/log/Syslog/ :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JgKY6w-LoTGph_KZfulI2IDLb7Mb8oTe/view?usp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NbxTA8TmX9ixHlyrygI6-DpCKgQ9jOwZ/view?usp=sharing


Setup

Code:
Kernelversion : Linux 5.4.73-1-pve #1 SMP PVE 5.4.73-1
PVE Manager Version : pve-manager/6.3-2/22f57405

CPU : 4 x Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2400 CPU @ 3.10GHz (1 Socket)
20 GB Ram (DDR3)

SSD : Intenson 3813430-532102015
 
Hey, I'm assuming you've already run hardware diagnostics on the CPU(multi-threaded), memory(at leaset 2 passes), and drives(and tested network cables if you are booting/running the VMs over the network) as well as checked the voltages that the motherboard is putting out, right?

If so, let everyone know you're hardware checks out before continuing. Also, it helps you know what your power supply is and the draw of each component, just to make sure you aren't overloading your allotted wattage.

If not, you should always make those checks first. I just fixed a problem a few months ago that was caused by my boot media, but I thought it was the update process corrupting the boot files. Also, in the last month the motherboard in one of my servers was having a power distribution problem and needed to be replaced, but it was failing to send enough power to my 10Gbit SFP card and some of the VMs were crashing because of the inconsistent power since I was using a NAS to store the VM data for HA clustering.
 
Hey, I'm assuming you've already run hardware diagnostics on the CPU(multi-threaded), memory(at leaset 2 passes), and drives(and tested network cables if you are booting/running the VMs over the network) as well as checked the voltages that the motherboard is putting out, right?

If so, let everyone know you're hardware checks out before continuing. Also, it helps you know what your power supply is and the draw of each component, just to make sure you aren't overloading your allotted wattage.

If not, you should always make those checks first. I just fixed a problem a few months ago that was caused by my boot media, but I thought it was the update process corrupting the boot files. Also, in the last month the motherboard in one of my servers was having a power distribution problem and needed to be replaced, but it was failing to send enough power to my 10Gbit SFP card and some of the VMs were crashing because of the inconsistent power since I was using a NAS to store the VM data for HA clustering.
thanks i already found the error a ram stick was broken
 
thanks i already found the error a ram stick was broken
Yeah, just straight crashes are likely to be hardware as long as there wasn't a bug in an update. Though if it was a bug you'd see hundreds of posts about crashes around the same time. Always perform regular hardware checks as a precaution, but especially to exclude common issues.
 

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