Discussion:
[rancid] what if a device audit fails?
Pete Perreault
2010-09-15 16:00:02 UTC
Permalink
I have rancid 2.3.2 running successfully on fedora. I have questions
related to what rancid does if a device audit fails to successfully
complete. This may occur if the device is not reachable or if rancid's
credentials are not accepted.

I run rancid from cron with the following command.

0 22 * * 5,6 /usr/libexec/rancid/rancid-run

As you can see it is run twice a week, Friday and Saturday at 10pm. When my
rancid logs indicate a device audit was not successfully completed,
subsequent log messages indicate that rancid attempts to audit all the
devices within the group one hour after the previous failure. This
continues until the device audit is successful.

Is this in fact the default behavior?
Is there a way to change this behavior either permanently (config change) or
for the individual instance (kill a process?)?
How is this happening? Is rancid, cron or something else making this
happen?

Thanks,
--
Pete
Pete Perreault
2010-09-15 16:39:59 UTC
Permalink
Just read the rancid.conf file, should have before I sent this. Everything
is there.

On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 12:00 PM, Pete Perreault
Post by Pete Perreault
I have rancid 2.3.2 running successfully on fedora. I have questions
related to what rancid does if a device audit fails to successfully
complete. This may occur if the device is not reachable or if rancid's
credentials are not accepted.
I run rancid from cron with the following command.
0 22 * * 5,6 /usr/libexec/rancid/rancid-run
As you can see it is run twice a week, Friday and Saturday at 10pm. When
my rancid logs indicate a device audit was not successfully completed,
subsequent log messages indicate that rancid attempts to audit all the
devices within the group one hour after the previous failure. This
continues until the device audit is successful.
Is this in fact the default behavior?
Is there a way to change this behavior either permanently (config change)
or for the individual instance (kill a process?)?
How is this happening? Is rancid, cron or something else making this
happen?
Thanks,
--
Pete
--
Pete
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