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Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago



Thanks everyone. We have been troubleshooting multiple operational issues here at NCO for the past couple of weeks but I will see if we can get someone to look into this tomorrow.

If we haven’t asked for this before, can you send a traceroute specifically over port 388? Sometimes the routing can be different for the LDM port.

Thanks,
Anne

On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 4:07 PM 'Pete Pokrandt' via _NCEP list.pmb-dataflow <address@hidden> wrote:
Here's a current traceroute form idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu to conduit.ncep.noaa.gov

[ldm@idd ~]$ traceroute conduit.ncep.noaa.gov
traceroute to conduit.ncep.noaa.gov (140.90.101.42), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets
 1  vlan-510-cssc-gw.net.wisc.edu (144.92.130.1)  0.906 ms  0.919 ms  0.885 ms
 2  128.104.4.129 (128.104.4.129)  1.546 ms  1.903 ms  1.632 ms
 3  rx-cssc-b380-1-core-bundle-ether2-1521.net.wisc.edu (146.151.168.4)  2.820 ms  2.731 ms  2.844 ms
 4  rx-animal-226-2-core-bundle-ether1-1928.net.wisc.edu (146.151.166.122)  1.824 ms  1.764 ms  3.164 ms
 5  144.92.254.229 (144.92.254.229)  6.274 ms  6.270 ms  6.256 ms
 6  et-1-1-5.4079.rtsw.ashb.net.internet2.edu (162.252.70.60)  22.740 ms  22.873 ms  22.910 ms
 7  et-11-3-0-1275.clpk-core.maxgigapop.net (206.196.177.2)  24.210 ms  24.214 ms  24.187 ms
 8  nwave-clpk-re.demarc.maxgigapop.net (206.196.177.189)  24.291 ms  24.227 ms  24.228 ms
 9  ae-2.666.rtr.clpk.nwave.noaa.gov (137.75.68.4)  24.189 ms  24.248 ms  24.155 ms
10  140.208.63.30 (140.208.63.30)  25.321 ms  25.253 ms  25.174 ms
11  140.90.76.65 (140.90.76.65)  96.364 ms  96.367 ms  96.488 ms
12  * * *
13  * * *


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: Gilbert Sebenste <address@hidden>
Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2019 2:44 PM
To: Tyle, Kevin R
Cc: Pete Pokrandt; Dustin Sheffler - NOAA Federal; Mike Zuranski; Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate; Kevin Goebbert; address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden

Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Yes, here at AllisonHouse too...we can feed from a number of sites, and all of them were dropping GFS, and delayed by an hour.

Gilbert

On Apr 16, 2019, at 2:39 PM, Tyle, Kevin R <address@hidden> wrote:

For what it's worth, our 12Z GFS data ingest was quite bad today ... many lost products beyond F168 (we feed from UWisc-MSN primary and PSU secondary).

_____________________________________________
Kevin Tyle, M.S.; Manager of Departmental Computing
Dept. of Atmospheric & Environmental Sciences  
University at Albany
Earth Science 235, 1400 Washington Avenue                       
Albany, NY 12222
Email: address@hidden
Phone: 518-442-4578                            
_____________________________________________

From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2019 12:00 PM
To: Dustin Sheffler - NOAA Federal; Mike Zuranski
Cc: Kevin Goebbert; address@hidden; Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
All,

Just keeping this in the foreground. 

CONDUIT lags continue to be very large compared to what they were previous to whatever changed back in February. Prior to that, we rarely saw lags more than ~300s. Now they are routinely 1500-2000s at UW-Madison and Penn State, and  over 3000s at Unidata - they appear to be on the edge of losing data. This does not bode well with all of the IDP applications failing back over to CP today..

Can we send you some traceroutes and you back to us to maybe try to isolate where in the network this is happening? It feels like congestion or a bad route somewhere - the lags seem to be worse on weekdays than weekends if that helps at all.

Here are the current CONDUIT lags to UW-Madison, Penn State and Unidata.




<iddstats_CONDUIT_idd_meteo_psu_edu_ending_20190416_1600UTC.gif>






Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Dustin Sheffler - NOAA Federal <address@hidden>
Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2019 12:52 PM
To: Mike Zuranski
Cc: address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Hi Mike,

Thanks for the feedback on NOMADS. We recently found a slowness issue when NOMADS is running out of our Boulder data center that is being worked on by our teams now that NOMADS is live out of the College Park data center. It's hard sometimes to quantify whether slowness issues that are only being reported by a handful of users is a result of something wrong in our data center, a bad network path between a customer (possibly just from a particular region of the country) and our data center, a local issue on the customers' end, or any other reason that might cause slowness.

Conduit is only ever run from our College Park data center. It's slowness is not tied into the Boulder NOMADS issue, but it does seem to be at least a little bit tied to which of our data centers NOMADS is running out of. When NOMADS is in Boulder along with the majority of our other NCEP applications, the strain on the College Park data center is minimal and Conduit appears to be running better as a result. When NOMADS runs in College Park (as it has since late yesterday) there is more strain on the data center and Conduit appears (based on provided user graphs) to run a bit worse around peak model times as a result. These are just my observations and we are still investigating what may have changed that caused the Conduit latencies to appear in the first place so that we can resolve this potential constraint.

-Dustin

On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 4:28 PM Mike Zuranski <address@hidden> wrote:
Hi everyone,

I've avoided jumping into this conversation since I don't deal much with Conduit these days, but Derek just mentioned something that I do have some applicable feedback on...

Two items happened last night.  1. NOMADS was moved back to College Park...

We get nearly all of our model data via NOMADS.  When it switched to Boulder last week we saw a significant drop in download speeds, down to a couple hundred KB/s or slower.  Starting last night, we're back to speeds on the order of MB/s or tens of MB/s.  Switching back to College Park seems to confirm for me something about routing from Boulder was responsible.  But again this was all on NOMADS, not sure if it's related to happenings on Conduit.

When I noticed this last week I sent an email to address@hidden including a traceroute taken at the time, let me know if you'd like me to find that and pass it along here or someplace else.

-Mike

======================
Mike Zuranski
Meteorology Support Analyst
College of DuPage - Nexlab
======================


On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 10:51 AM Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden> wrote:

Derek,


Do we know what change might have been made around February 10th when the CONDUIT problems first started happening?  Prior to that time, the CONDUIT feed had been very crisp for a long period of time.


Thanks...            Art



Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email:  address@hidden, phone:  814-863-1563




From: Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden>
Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2019 11:34 AM
To: Holly Uhlenhake - NOAA Federal
Cc: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal; Person, Arthur A.; Pete Pokrandt; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Hi all,

Two items happened last night.

1.   NOMADS was moved back to College Park, which means there was a lot more traffic going out which will have effect on the Conduit latencies.  We do not have a full load from the COllege Park Servers as many of the other applications are still running from Boulder, but NOMADS will certainly increase overall load.

2.   As Holly said, there were further issues delaying and changing the timing of the model output yesterday afternoon/evening.  I will be watching from our end, and monitoring the Unidata 48 hour graph (thank you for the link) throughout the day,

Please let us know if you have questions or more information to help us analyse what you are seeing. 

Thank you,

Derek


On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 6:50 AM Holly Uhlenhake - NOAA Federal <address@hidden> wrote:
Hi Pete,

We also had an issue on the supercomputer yesterday where several models going to conduit would have been stacked on top of each other instead of coming out in a more spread out fashion.  It's not inconceivable that conduit could have backed up working through the abnormally large glut of grib messages.    Are things better this morning at all?

Thanks,
Holly

On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 12:37 AM Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden> wrote:
Something changed starting with today's 18 UTC model cycle, and our lags shot up to over 3600 seconds, where we started losing data. They are growing again now with the 00 UTC cycle as well. PSU and Unidata CONDUIT stats show similar abnormally large lags.

FYI.
Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden>
Sent: Friday, April 5, 2019 2:10 PM
To: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal
Cc: Pete Pokrandt; Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate; Gilbert Sebenste; address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 

Carissa,


The Boulder connection is definitely performing very well for CONDUIT.  Although there have been a couple of little blips (~ 120 seconds) since yesterday, overall the performance is superb.  I don't think it's quite as clean as prior to the ~February 10th date when the D.C. connection went bad, but it's still excellent performance.  Here's our graph now with a single connection (no splits):


My next question is:  Will CONDUIT stay pointing at Boulder until D.C. is fixed, or might you be required to switch back to D.C. at some point before that?


Thanks...               Art


Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email:  address@hidden, phone:  814-863-1563




From: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal <address@hidden>
Sent: Thursday, April 4, 2019 6:22 PM
To: Person, Arthur A.
Cc: Pete Pokrandt; Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate; Gilbert Sebenste; address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Catching up here.

Derek,
Do we have traceroutes from all users? Does anything in VCenter show any system resource constraints?

On Thursday, April 4, 2019, Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden> wrote:

Yeh, definitely looks "blipier" starting around 7Z this morning, but nothing like it was before.  And all last night was clean.  Here's our graph with a 2-way split, a huge improvement over what it was before the switch to Boulder:



Agree with Pete that this morning's data probably isn't a good test since there were other factors.  Since this seems so much better, I'm going to try switching to no split as an experiment and see how it holds up.


                        Art


Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email:  address@hidden, phone:  814-863-1563




From: Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
Sent: Thursday, April 4, 2019 1:51 PM
To: Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate
Cc: Person, Arthur A.; Gilbert Sebenste; Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate; address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Ah, so perhaps not a good test.. I'll set it back to a 5-way split and see how it looks tomorrow.

Thanks for the info,
Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: Derek VanPelt - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden>
Sent: Thursday, April 4, 2019 12:38 PM
To: Pete Pokrandt
Cc: Person, Arthur A.; Gilbert Sebenste; Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate; address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
HI Pete -- we did have a separate issu hit the CONDUIT feed today.  We should be recovering now, but the backlog was sizeable.  If these numbers are not back to the baseline in the next hour or so please let us know.  We are also watching our queues and they are decreasing, but not as quickly as we had hoped.

Thank you,

Derek

On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 1:26 PM 'Pete Pokrandt' via _NCEP list.pmb-dataflow <address@hidden> wrote:
FYI - there is still a much larger lag for the 12 UTC run with a 5-way split compared to a 10-way split. It's better since everything else failed over to Boulder, but I'd venture to guess that's not the root of the problem.



Prior to whatever is going on to cause this, I don'r recall ever seeing lags this large with a 5-way split. It looked much more like the left hand side of this graph, with small increases in lag with each 6 hourly model run cycle, but more like 100 seconds vs the ~900 that I got this morning.

FYI I am going to change back to a 10 way split for now.

Pete



--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 4:57 PM
To: Person, Arthur A.; Gilbert Sebenste; Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate
Cc: address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Sorry, was out this morning and just had a chance to look into this. I concur with Art and Gilbert that things appear to have gotten better starting with the failover of everything else to Boulder yesterday. I will also reconfigure to go back to a 5-way split (as opposed to the 10-way split that I've been using since this issue began) and keep an eye on tomorrow's 12 UTC model run cycle - if the lags go up, it usually happens worst during that cycle, shortly before 18 UTC each day. 

I'll report back tomorrow how it looks, or you can see at 


Thanks,
Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 4:04 PM
To: Gilbert Sebenste; Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate
Cc: address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 

Anne,


I'll hop back in the loop here... for some reason these replies started going into my junk file (bleh).  Anyway, I agree with Gilbert's assessment.  Things turned real clean around 12Z yesterday, looking at the graphs.  I usually look at flood.atmos.uiuc.edu when there are problem as their connection always seems to be the cleanest.  If there are even small blips or ups and downs in their latencies, that usually means there's a network aberration somewhere that usually amplifies into hundreds or thousands of seconds at our site and elsewhere.  Looking at their graph now, you can see the blipiness up until 12Z yesterday, and then it's flat (except for the one spike around 16Z today which I would ignore):


<pastedImage.png>

Our direct-connected site, which is using a 10-way split right now, also shows a return to calmness in the latencies:


Prior to the recent latency jump, I did not use split requests and the reception had been stellar for quite some time.  It's my suspicion that this is a networking congestion issue somewhere close to the source since it seems to affect all downstream sites.  For that reason, I don't think solving this problem should necessarily involve upgrading your server software, but rather identifying what's jamming up the network near D.C., and testing this by switching to Boulder was an excellent idea.  I will now try switching our system to a two-way split to see if this performance holds up with fewer pipes.  Thanks for your help and I'll let you know what I find out.


                                 Art


Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email:  address@hidden, phone:  814-863-1563




From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Gilbert Sebenste <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 4:07 PM
To: Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate
Cc: address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Hello Anne,

I'll jump in here as well. Consider the CONDUIT delays at UNIDATA:

http://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+conduit.unidata.ucar.edu 

And now, Wisconsin: 

http://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd.aos.wisc.edu 

And finally, the University of Washington:

http://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+freshair1.atmos.washington.edu  

All three of whom have direct feeds from you. Flipping over to Boulder definitely caused a major improvement. There was still a brief spike in delay, but much shorter and minimal
compared to what it was.

Gilbert

On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 10:03 AM Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden> wrote:
Hi Pete,

As of yesterday we failed almost all of our applications to our site in Boulder (meaning away from CONDUIT). Have you noticed an improvement in your speeds since yesterday afternoon? If so this will give us a clue that maybe there's something interfering on our side that isn't specifically CONDUIT, but another app that might be causing congestion. (And if it's the same then that's a clue in the other direction.)

Thanks,
Anne

On Mon, Apr 1, 2019 at 3:24 PM Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden> wrote:
The lag here at UW-Madison was up to 1200 seconds today, and that's with a 10-way split feed. Whatever is causing the issue has definitely not been resolved, and historically is worse during the work week than on the weekends. If that helps at all.

Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: Anne Myckow - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden>
Sent: Thursday, March 28, 2019 4:28 PM
To: Person, Arthur A.
Cc: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal; Pete Pokrandt; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow; address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Hello Art,

We will not be upgrading to version 6.13 on these systems as they are not robust enough to support the local logging inherent in the new version.

I will check in with my team on if there are any further actions we can take to try and troubleshoot this issue, but I fear we may be at the limit of our ability to make this better.

I’ll let you know tomorrow where we stand. Thanks.
Anne

On Mon, Mar 25, 2019 at 3:00 PM Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden> wrote:

Carissa,


Can you report any status on this inquiry?


Thanks...          Art


Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email:  address@hidden, phone:  814-863-1563




From: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal <address@hidden>
Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2019 8:30 AM
To: Pete Pokrandt
Cc: Person, Arthur A.; address@hidden; address@hidden; _NCEP.List.pmb-dataflow
Subject: Re: Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Hi Everyone

I’ve added the Dataflow team email to the thread. I haven’t heard that any changes were made or that any issues were found. But the team can look today and see if we have any signifiers of overall slowness with anything. 

Dataflow, try taking a look at the new Citrix or VM troubleshooting tools if there are any abnormal signatures that may explain this. 

On Monday, March 11, 2019, Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden> wrote:
Art,

I don't know if NCEP ever figured anything out, but I've been able to keep my latencies reasonable (300-600s max, mostly during the 12 UTC model suite) by splitting my CONDUIT request 10 ways, instead of the 5 that I had been doing, or in a single request. Maybe give that a try and see if it helps at all.

Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: Person, Arthur A. <address@hidden>
Sent: Monday, March 11, 2019 3:45 PM
To: Holly Uhlenhake - NOAA Federal; Pete Pokrandt
Cc: address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 

Holly,


Was there any resolution to this on the NCEP end?  I'm still seeing terrible delays (1000-4000 seconds) receiving data from conduit.ncep.noaa.gov.  It would be helpful to know if things are resolved at NCEP's end so I know whether to look further down the line.


Thanks...           Art


Arthur A. Person
Assistant Research Professor, System Administrator
Penn State Department of Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
email:  address@hidden, phone:  814-863-1563




From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Holly Uhlenhake - NOAA Federal <address@hidden>
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2019 12:05 PM
To: Pete Pokrandt
Cc: address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Hi Pete,

We'll take a look and see if we can figure out what might be going on.  We haven't done anything to try and address this yet, but based on your analysis I'm suspicious that it might be tied to a resource constraint on the VM or the blade it resides on.

Thanks,
Holly Uhlenhake
Acting Dataflow Team Lead

On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 11:32 AM Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden> wrote:
Just FYI, data is flowing, but the large lags continue.


Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2019 12:07 PM
To: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal
Cc: address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Data is flowing again - picked up somewhere in the GEFS. Maybe CONDUIT server was restarted, or ldm on it? Lags are large (3000s+) but dropping slowly

Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2019 11:56 AM
To: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal
Cc: address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: Re: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Just a quick follow-up - we started falling far enough behind (3600+ sec) that we are losing data. We got short files starting at 174h into the GFS run, and only got (incomplete) data through 207h.

We have now not received any data on CONDUIT since 11:27 AM CST (1727 UTC) today (Wed Feb 20)

Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden



From: address@hidden <address@hidden> on behalf of Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2019 11:28 AM
To: Carissa Klemmer - NOAA Federal
Cc: address@hidden; address@hidden
Subject: [conduit] Large lags on CONDUIT feed - started a week or so ago
 
Carissa,

We have been feeding CONDUIT using a 5 way split feed direct from conduit.ncep.noaa.gov, and it had been really good for some time, lags 30-60 seconds or less.

However, the past week or so, we've been seeing some very large lags during each 6 hour model suite - Unidata is also seeing these - they are also feeding direct from conduit.ncep.noaa.gov.




Any idea what's going on, or how we can find out? 

Thanks!
Pete


--
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086  - address@hidden

_______________________________________________
NOTE: All exchanges posted to Unidata maintained email lists are
recorded in the Unidata inquiry tracking system and made publicly
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conduit mailing list
address@hidden
For list information or to unsubscribe, visit: http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/mailing_lists/


--
Carissa Klemmer
NCEP Central Operations
IDSB Branch Chief
301-683-3835

_______________________________________________
Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow mailing list
address@hidden
https://www.lstsrv.ncep.noaa.gov/mailman/listinfo/ncep.list.pmb-dataflow
--
Anne Myckow
Lead Dataflow Analyst
NOAA/NCEP/NCO
301-683-3825


--
Anne Myckow
Lead Dataflow Analyst
NOAA/NCEP/NCO
301-683-3825
_______________________________________________
NOTE: All exchanges posted to Unidata maintained email lists are
recorded in the Unidata inquiry tracking system and made publicly
available through the web.  Users who post to any of the lists we
maintain are reminded to remove any personal information that they
do not want to be made public.


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For list information or to unsubscribe, visit: http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/mailing_lists/


--
----
 
Gilbert Sebenste
Consulting Meteorologist
AllisonHouse, LLC
_______________________________________________
Ncep.list.pmb-dataflow mailing list
address@hidden
https://www.lstsrv.ncep.noaa.gov/mailman/listinfo/ncep.list.pmb-dataflow


--
Derek Van Pelt
DataFlow Analyst
NOAA/NCEP/NCO


--
Carissa Klemmer
NCEP Central Operations
IDSB Branch Chief
301-683-3835

_______________________________________________
NOTE: All exchanges posted to Unidata maintained email lists are
recorded in the Unidata inquiry tracking system and made publicly
available through the web.  Users who post to any of the lists we
maintain are reminded to remove any personal information that they
do not want to be made public.


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Derek Van Pelt
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--
Misspelled straight from Derek's phone.
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Anne Myckow
Lead Dataflow Analyst
NOAA/NCEP/NCO
301-683-3825
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