Im getting a Gateway Timeout when logging in to Nagios Log Server. One instance.
This is a VM with 4 cores and 32GB of RAM. Its not a light machine :/ I can throw more resources at it but I want to make sure I dont do overboard.
What and how can we do to fix it? It needs to be a configuration of some sort that makes it decent
Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
Hi @riahc3, thanks for reaching out.
Have you checked the disk space to see if any of the partitions are out of space?
If that is not the issue, we could use more information, in order to help you. What OS/version and version of Log Server are you using?
Have you checked the disk space to see if any of the partitions are out of space?
If that is not the issue, we could use more information, in order to help you. What OS/version and version of Log Server are you using?
Please let us know if you have any other questions or concerns.
-Laura
-Laura
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
There is space.
CentOS Stream 9
Kernel 5.14.0-410.el9.x86_64
I would say its the latest version of Nagios Log Server (I cant logon because of this constant error)
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
Hi @riahc3,
We've identified this as a problem on our end. We don't have a workaround but there will be a fix with the next maintenance release of NLS.
We've identified this as a problem on our end. We don't have a workaround but there will be a fix with the next maintenance release of NLS.
Developer @ Nagios 2017-05-15 thru 2024-08-06
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
Oh, we were thinking it was resources or ELK (Elastic, Logstash or Kibana) issue...Thank you for confirming.
Is there a approximate release date for the next maintenance release? Obviously, we have two issues:
1: No access to logs
2: Disk space filling up and noway to administer it (except expanding the partition which just gets filled up again)
What do you recommend?
Thanks
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
I can't guarantee this will work, but you can try visiting the 'admin' or 'dashboard' section directly by modifying your URL, e.g. https://<logserver_ip>/nagioslogserver/admin - if that works for you, just avoid visiting the home page and you should still have access to the rest of the application. If it doesn't work, the apache server might still be hanging on the original request in spite of the gateway timeout - you might try directly visiting the URL without filling out the login form again ~5-10 minutes later.
As far as the next release of Log Server, I would guess that it'll be somewhere between mid-April and mid-May, but nothing is set in stone right now.
As far as the next release of Log Server, I would guess that it'll be somewhere between mid-April and mid-May, but nothing is set in stone right now.
Developer @ Nagios 2017-05-15 thru 2024-08-06
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
Tried to go both to http://<logserverip>/nagioslogserver/dashboard and http://<logserverip>/nagioslogserver/admin and same thing ; It doesnt even give me a chance to login.swolf wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 11:26 am I can't guarantee this will work, but you can try visiting the 'admin' or 'dashboard' section directly by modifying your URL, e.g. https://<logserver_ip>/nagioslogserver/admin - if that works for you, just avoid visiting the home page and you should still have access to the rest of the application. If it doesn't work, the apache server might still be hanging on the original request in spite of the gateway timeout - you might try directly visiting the URL without filling out the login form again ~5-10 minutes later.
As far as the next release of Log Server, I would guess that it'll be somewhere between mid-April and mid-May, but nothing is set in stone right now.
Is there a way to downgrade some way to a previous Nagios Log Server? Any auditing would cause issues as we cannot get logs...
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
I probably spoke too quickly - I talked to the Support team and they're saying they do see a fair number of gateway timeout issues due to hardware limitations (usually RAM). If the workaround from my last reply doesn't work, that makes it more likely that it's not due to the issue we're patching next month. At this point, I would recommend opening a case so that the Support team can answer definitively for your specific system.
As far as "downgrade" functionality, that's unfortunately not something we have at this time.
As far as "downgrade" functionality, that's unfortunately not something we have at this time.
Developer @ Nagios 2017-05-15 thru 2024-08-06
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
Do I need to go to 64GB? I remember there were some adjustments that can be made to Elastic so it can be more stable.swolf wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 10:28 am I probably spoke too quickly - I talked to the Support team and they're saying they do see a fair number of gateway timeout issues due to hardware limitations (usually RAM). If the workaround from my last reply doesn't work, that makes it more likely that it's not due to the issue we're patching next month. At this point, I would recommend opening a case so that the Support team can answer definitively for your specific system.
As far as "downgrade" functionality, that's unfortunately not something we have at this time.
Re: Gateway Timeout logging in to Nagios Log Server
If you're already on 32GB RAM, I would expect that to be sufficient for most environments, but I can't speak to yours - I would highly recommend opening a case on Answer Hub so that our support team can look into your environment and help dig into logs.
Developer @ Nagios 2017-05-15 thru 2024-08-06