On Sun, Mar 20, 2016 at 4:55 PM, Larry Martell <larry.mart...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, Mar 20, 2016 at 4:47 PM, Joel Goldstick > <joel.goldst...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Sun, Mar 20, 2016 at 4:32 PM, Larry Martell <larry.mart...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>> I have a script that I run a lot - at least 10 time every day. Usually >>> it works fine. But sometime it just stops running with nothing output >>> to stdout or stderr. I've been trying to debug this for a while, and >>> today I looked in the system logs and saw this: >>> >>> abrt: detected unhandled Python exception in >>> '/home/prod_user/python/make_workitem_list.py' >>> abrtd: Directory 'pyhook-2016-03-19-22:20:43-26461' creation detected >>> abrt-server[3688]: Saved Python crash dump of pid 26461 to >>> /var/spool/abrt/pyhook-2016-03-19-22:20:43-26461 >>> abrtd: Executable '/home/prod_user/python/make_workitem_list.py' >>> doesn't belong to any package and ProcessUnpackaged is set to 'no' >>> abrtd: 'post-create' on >>> '/var/spool/abrt/pyhook-2016-03-19-22:20:43-26461' exited with 1 >>> abrtd: Deleting problem directory >>> '/var/spool/abrt/pyhook-2016-03-19-22:20:43-26461' >>> abrtd: make_workitem_list: page allocation failure. order:1, mode:0x20 >>> abrtd: Pid: 31870, comm: make_workitem_list Not tainted >>> 2.6.32-573.12.1.el6.x86_64 #1 >>> >>> I have never seen anything like this before. Usually, if there is an >>> unhandled exception something is dumped to stderr. Anyone have any >>> idea what is going on? How can I get it to not delete this crash dump >>> it mentioned? I guess I can put a big exception handler around the >>> enter script with a traceback. >>> >>> This is on Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.7 (Santiago). >> >> Googling I found this: >> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2628901/interpreting-kernel-message-page-allocation-failure-order1 >> >> It seems that the kernel can't allocate memory is a likely cause.
I modified the program to use less memory and I am not getting the page allocation failure any more, but I am still getting the unhanded exceptions messages in the system logs. > Yes, I was thinking that as well about the "page allocation failure" > message, but it's almost like there were 2 errors, the first being the > unhandled exception. But why would it not output something to stderr? I was able to configure the abrt daemon to capture these unhanded exceptions and they are just typical ValueErrors and TypeErrors (which I will of course deal with in my program). But I wonder why these exceptions were not just printed to stderr as other unhanded exceptions are. What is special about these that made the OS get involved? -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list