Try putting pqact into verbose mode.
exec "pqact -v"
and then restart ldm. It should tell you everything pqact is doing.
On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 4:42 PM, Blair Trosper <
blair.trosper@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> It's enabled and not commented.
>
> Putting ldm into verbose mode didn't seem to yield anything additional in
> the log files. In fact, it's very UNdescriptive.
>
>
> On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 4:41 PM, Karen Cooper - NOAA Affiliate <
> karen.cooper@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> And of course what I really meant was the exec line in your ldmd.conf...
>>
>> exec "pqact "
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 4:40 PM, Karen Cooper - NOAA Affiliate <
>> karen.cooper@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>> Blair,
>>>
>>> First a sanity check. -- Are you sure that pqact is uncommented in your
>>> ldmadmin.pl?
>>>
>>> You can set pqact to verbose mode and then you should see what it's
>>> trying to do, as it will log to your ldmd.log files. I often use this when
>>> I'm testing out new pqact entries that aren't working as I expect.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 4:35 PM, Blair Trosper <
>>> blair.trosper@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I'm receiving several feeds as proven by ldmadmin watch...and the logs
>>>> all look fine. However, my data isn't being saved to disk.
>>>>
>>>> From *registry.xml*:
>>>>
>>>>> <pqact>
>>>>> <config-path>/mnt/data/ldm/etc/pqact.conf</config-path>
>>>>> <datadir-path>/mnt/data/ldm/var/data</datadir-path>
>>>>> </pqact>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> From */mnt/data/ldm/etc/pqact.conf*:
>>>>
>>>>> # L2 data
>>>>> NEXRAD2
>>>>> ^L2-BZIP2/(....)/([0-9]{8})([0-9]{4})[0-9]{2}/([0-9]{1,4}).*/[SI]
>>>>> FILE nexrad2/\1/\1_\2-\3.part
>>>>> NEXRAD2 ^L2-BZIP2/(....)/([0-9]{8})([0-9]{4})[0-9]{2}/([0-9]{1,4}).*/E
>>>>> FILE -close nexrad2/\1/\1_\2-\3.part
>>>>> (snip)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> However, following those two things, here's a directory listing of *
>>>> /mnt/data/ldm/var/data*:
>>>>
>>>>> ldm@chicago-il-1:~/data$ ls -lsha
>>>>> total 8.0K
>>>>> 4.0K drwxr-xr-x 2 ldm ldm 4.0K Jul 15 16:09 .
>>>>> 4.0K drwxr-xr-x 5 ldm ldm 4.0K Jul 13 23:19 ..
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Nothing. The same is true of other feeds which should be stashed in
>>>> other subdirectories.
>>>>
>>>> The bandwidth is certainly registering, which I have verified at the
>>>> router, so I'm definitely receiving the data...so...
>>>>
>>>> Where are my files going? Any way to track this down?
>>>>
>>>> (I've also done "du -ksh" from the home directory of the ldm user over
>>>> the last few hours, and it's not increasing. Definitely nothing being
>>>> written to hard disk. And still no errors in the LDM or system logs.)
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Blair Trosper
>>>> Weather Data / Updraft Networks
>>>> blair.trosper@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <blair.trosper@xxxxxxxxxx>
>>>> NOC: 512-666-0536
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> ldm-users mailing list
>>>> ldm-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>> For list information or to unsubscribe, visit:
>>>> http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/mailing_lists/
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> “Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get."
>>> -- Robert A. Heinlein
>>>
>>> -------------------------------------------
>>> Karen.Cooper@xxxxxxxx
>>>
>>> Phone: 405-325-6982
>>> Cell: 405-834-8559
>>> INDUS Corporation
>>> National Severe Storms Laboratory
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> “Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get."
>> -- Robert A. Heinlein
>>
>> -------------------------------------------
>> Karen.Cooper@xxxxxxxx
>>
>> Phone: 405-325-6982
>> Cell: 405-834-8559
>> INDUS Corporation
>> National Severe Storms Laboratory
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Blair Trosper
> Weather Data / Updraft Networks
> blair.trosper@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <blair.trosper@xxxxxxxxxx>
> NOC: 512-666-0536
>
--
“Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get."
-- Robert A. Heinlein
-------------------------------------------
Karen.Cooper@xxxxxxxx
Phone: 405-325-6982
Cell: 405-834-8559
INDUS Corporation
National Severe Storms Laboratory