01 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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Before the days of javascript and ajax and web 2.0, MIDAS introduced "custom pages" for
building graphical display that could show "live" data from MIDAS and that could
have buttons and controls to operate slow controls equipment, etc.
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04 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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Parsing all URL in mhttpd to prevent /etc/passwd etc. to be returned is tricky, because people can use escape sequences etc. Therefore I think it is much
better to restrict file access
on the file system level when opening a file. The only escape there one could have is "..", which can be tested easily.
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04 Mar 2019, Thomas Lindner, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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Hi Stefan and Konstantin,
I think that this proposal sounds fairly reasonable. I agree that we might as well move to a secure final solution at this point.
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04 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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Sounds reasonable to me.
Stefan
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04 Mar 2019, Suzannah Daviel, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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I see two separate issues here.
One is restricting the custom pages to ONE directory such as
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04 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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Hi, guys, as I was exploring the code and the commit history on Thursday (git rules!) and
as I worked on getting the old custom files to work with Suzannah on Friday, I think
I know how I want this code to work. I think there is no need to break with the old
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05 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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First, I did not propose to give up the /Custom tree in the ODB, sorry for the misunderstanding. We still need it in order to display the menu with the
custom pages at the left side navigation bar. In principle all can stay like it is, except we remove /Custom/Path and rewrite the file server to restrict
it only
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05 Mar 2019, Thomas Lindner, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> First, I did not propose to give up the /Custom tree in the ODB, sorry for the misunderstanding. We still need it in order to display the menu with the
custom pages at the left side navigation bar. In principle all can stay like it is, except we remove /Custom/Path and rewrite the file server to restrict
it only
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05 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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>
> That sounds fine, as long as it is clearly documented.
>
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05 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> First, I did not propose to give up the /Custom tree in the ODB, sorry for the misunderstanding.
> We still need it in order to display the menu with the custom pages at the left side navigation bar.
> In principle all can stay like it is, except we remove /Custom/Path and rewrite the file server to restrict it only
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05 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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I stop the discussion here because it goes in circles. We can't convince each others, so somebody has to give up, and that's me.
> We have several large installations at TRIUMF that use the old-style custom pages - MUSR, BNMR/BNQR, TITAN (and more?) -
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05 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> > We have several large installations at TRIUMF that use the old-style custom pages - MUSR, BNMR/BNQR, TITAN (and more?) -
> > none of these experiments are going away any time soon and none of these custom pages are rewriting themselves.
>
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05 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> The biggest problem so far we have seen is with some pages having incorrect form submission
> settings - some forms use the wrong form "action" attribute, which worked before, we do not know
> why, and definitely does not work now. This is not something that we can fix on the midas side.
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06 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> > The biggest problem so far we have seen is with some pages having incorrect form submission
> > settings - some forms use the wrong form "action" attribute, which worked before, we do not know
> > why, and definitely does not work now. This is not something that we can fix on the midas side.
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05 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> - mhttpd cannot serve /etc/passwd by default as "/" is forbidden in file names added to /Custom/Path.
You do this with a simple
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05 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> > - mhttpd cannot serve /etc/passwd by default as "/" is forbidden in file names added to /Custom/Path.
> You do this with a simple
> if (custom_path == "/")
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05 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> > > - mhttpd cannot serve /etc/passwd by default as "/" is forbidden in file names added to /Custom/Path.
> > You do this with a simple
> > if (custom_path == "/")
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05 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> Just set
> /Custom/Path = /./
> which is allowed right now and then access etc/passwd, which translates to /./etc/passwd and then you get the password file.
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14 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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I now understand Stefan's and Thomas's proposal a little bit better.
In my mind only one issue remains - when we say "we will serve files from directory X", how
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14 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> In my mind only one issue remains - when we say "we will serve files from directory X", how
> to we prevent mhttpd from serving files outside this directory by using trick URLs containing ".."
> and/or other gimmicks.
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14 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> > In my mind only one issue remains - when we say "we will serve files from directory X", how
> > to we prevent mhttpd from serving files outside this directory by using trick URLs containing ".."
> > and/or other gimmicks.
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21 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> In my mind only one issue remains - when we say "we will serve files from directory X", how
> to we prevent mhttpd from serving files outside this directory by using trick URLs containing ".."
> and/or other gimmicks.
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21 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Gyrations of custom pages and ODB /Custom/Path
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> Before the days of javascript and ajax and web 2.0, MIDAS introduced "custom pages" for
> building graphical display that could show "live" data from MIDAS and that could
> have buttons and controls to operate slow controls equipment, etc.
|
14 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, switch to json odb dump format
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Regarding odb dumps saved into the midas output files, there are several
requests to make it possible to save odb in the json format.
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18 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, bitbucket issue tracker "feature"
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It turns out the bitbucket issue tracker has a feature - I cannot make it automatically add me
to the watcher list of all new issues.
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14 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, bitbucket issue tracker "feature"
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> It turns out the bitbucket issue tracker has a feature - I cannot make it automatically add me
> to the watcher list of all new issues.
>
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02 Mar 2019, Pintaudi Giorgio, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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Hello!
My name is Giorgio Pintaudi and I am a Ph.D. student at Yokohama National
University (Japan). I also happen to be a T2K collaborator.
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04 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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Hi, Giorgio - you are asking excellent questions. I will try to answer them, but as ever, there are no
easy answers.
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04 Mar 2019, Pintaudi Giorgio, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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Hi Konstantin,
thank you for the very in-depth answer. Right now I am using the latest version of MIDAS (the head of the
develop branch) and I have not noticed any bugs or problems in the MIDAS code, except the ones that I
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05 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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>
> PS other than the code peculiar to our experiment, I have made a little modification to the MIDAS install
> Makefile (I noticed that there is an "install" target but not an "uninstall" target so I wrote it).
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05 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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> Hmm... for most experiments, we do not "install" midas. I should probably remove the "install" target from the Makefile.
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06 Mar 2019, Pintaudi Giorgio, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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> > Hmm... for most experiments, we do not "install" midas. I should probably remove the "install" target from the Makefile.
>
>
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06 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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> > > Hmm... for most experiments, we do not "install" midas. I should probably remove the "install" target from the Makefile.
>
> install MIDAS in the /opt/midas folder to remain consistent with the other programs that we are using for
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06 Mar 2019, Pintaudi Giorgio, Forum, Best MIDAS branch/version for "production"
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> I see. Would this work as well? Instead of "make install" do this:
> su - root
> cd /opt
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13 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, systemd unit file for mhttpd
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> > Can you post your systemd unit file to this elog, others may find it useful.
Thank you very much!
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13 Mar 2019, Pintaudi Giorgio, Forum, systemd unit file for mhttpd
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> Note: user name "neo" and home directory is hardwired into the unit file. Also
> it runs after "network.target", this may be too early, it should run after nis and autofs
> have started (and made home directories accessible). (not sure what systemd target
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14 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, systemd unit file for mhttpd
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> As far as NIS is concerned, I am sorry but I don't know how it is used by MIDAS.
NIS is traditionally used together with autofs to form clusters of UNIX/Linux machines. NIS is a database
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11 Mar 2019, Francesco Renga, Forum, Run length
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Dear all,
I need to implement a DAQ sequence where a short run (100 events, which takes a couple of
minutes) is taken every hour, with a long run in between two short runs. In the sequencer, I can do:
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12 Mar 2019, Stefan Ritt, Forum, Run length
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> Is there a way to start the short run exactly 1 h after the starting
> of the previous short run?
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12 Mar 2019, Pierre Gorel, Forum, Run length
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>
> .... some ODB settings ....
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13 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, Run length
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I did not quite understand your desired sequence, is this what you want:
- at 1pm
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12 Mar 2019, Francesco Renga, Forum, Problem stopping every second run
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Dear all,
I'm running a DAQ frontend and it works well if one single run is
taken. If I try to take a second run right after, the run is performed but, when
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13 Mar 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, Problem stopping every second run
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> I'm running a DAQ frontend and it works well if one single run is
> taken. If I try to take a second run right after, the run is performed but, when
> stopping it, I get the error messages below. Any hint?
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20 Feb 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, odb needs protection against ctrl-c
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Even with the cm_watchdog signal removed, some trouble from UNIX signals remains.
This time, when one presses Ctrl-C at the wrong time, the Ctrl-C signal handler will run at the wrong time
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20 Feb 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, odb needs protection against ctrl-c
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Not sure if you realized, but there is a two-stage Ctrl-C handling inside midas. The first time you hit ctrl-c, the handler just sets a flag for the main
event loop, so that the program can gracefully exit without trouble. This is
done inside cm_ctrlc_handler(), which sets _ctrlc_pressed true if called. Then cm_yield() tests this flag and returns RPC_SHUTDOWN if so. I agree not very |
20 Feb 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, odb needs protection against ctrl-c
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> Not sure if you realized, but there is a two-stage Ctrl-C handling inside midas.
Hmm... I am looking at the ctrl-c handler inside odbedit.
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20 Feb 2019, Stefan Ritt, Info, odb needs protection against ctrl-c
|
Have you read what I wrote? The current ctrl-c handler just sets the _ctrlc_pressed flag. It might be that some programs do not correctly interprete the
return of cm_yield(), certainly the frontend does it correctly. On the SECOND ctrl-c, the program gets
(internally) hard aborted, equivalent to calling abort(). Not sure if the code works everywhere, I see now that cm_yield(() should maybe return SS_ABORT |
20 Feb 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, odb needs protection against ctrl-c
|
Commit f81ff3c protects db_lock/unlock, but not any of the other functions. What if we do ctrl-c in the middle
of some odb write operation in the middle of memory allocation, etc.
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11 Feb 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, json-rpc request for ODB /Script and /CustomScript.
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I added json-rpc requests for ODB /Script and /CustomScript (the first one shows up on the status page in the left hand side menu, the
second one is "hidden", intended for use by custom pages).
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14 Jan 2019, Becky Chislett, Bug Report, Custom script with new MIDAS
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I am having difficulty getting the custom scripts to work within the updated MIDAS. Before the
update I was using something like :
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18 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Bug Report, Custom script with new MIDAS
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> I am having difficulty getting the custom scripts to work within the updated MIDAS. Before the
> update I was using something like :
>
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22 Jan 2019, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, Custom script with new MIDAS
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I just check that feature and found it's still working as expected.
On trap I fell in was that a custom page needs the <input type=submit ...> to be imbedded into a pair of
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24 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Bug Report, Custom script with new MIDAS
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> <input type=submit name=customscript value="test">
Stefan is right, input-type-submit has to be inside a form. This type of rpc call is "old school". Today, we should
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24 Jan 2019, Andreas Suter, Suggestion, json rpc API for history data
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For us it would be a handy feature if history data could be requested directly
from a custom page (time range or run based intervals) . Here I am not talking
about history plots but I am talking about recorded time series data. This way
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24 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Suggestion, json rpc API for history data
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> For us it would be a handy feature if history data could be requested directly
> from a custom page (time range or run based intervals) . Here I am not talking
> about history plots but I am talking about recorded time series data. This way
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10 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, removal of cm_watchdog()
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cm_watchdog() has been removed from the latest midas sources. The watchdog functions performed by cm_watchdog() were
moved to cm_yield() - those are - maintaining odb and event buffer "last active" timestamps and checking for and removing of
timed-out clients.
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21 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, removal of cm_watchdog()
|
> cm_watchdog() has been removed from the latest midas sources
> Removal of cm_watchdog() solves many problems in the midas code base:
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24 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, removal of cm_watchdog()
|
> > cm_watchdog() has been removed from the latest midas sources
> > Removal of cm_watchdog() solves many problems in the midas code base:
> Removal of cm_watchdog() creates new problems:
|
28 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 1
|
In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code, the path
that events travel from the frontend to the SYSTEM buffer to mlogger (and to disk).
|
28 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 2, bm_send_event()
|
> In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> we need to understand and write down how the event buffer code works.
|
28 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 3, rpc_send_event()
|
> In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> we need to understand and write down how the event buffer code works.
> bm_send_event() does this ...
|
28 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 4, reading from event buffer
|
> > In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> > we need to understand and write down how the event buffer code works.
> > bm_send_event() does this ...
|
02 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 5, bm_read_buffer()
|
> > > In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> > > we need to understand and write down how the event buffer code works.
> > > bm_send_event() does this ...
|
02 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 6, reading events through the mserver
|
> > > > In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> > > > we need to understand and write down how the event buffer code works.
> > > > bm_send_event() does this ...
|
03 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 7, event buffer polling frequencies
|
> > > > > In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> > > > > we need to understand and write down how the event buffer code works.
> > > > > bm_send_event() does this ...
|
03 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 8, writer and reader communications
|
> > > > > > In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
Event buffer readers and writers need to communicate following information:
|
10 Jan 2019, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, note on the midas event buffer code, part 8, writer and reader communications
|
> > > > > > > In this technical note, I write down the workings of the midas event buffer code
> Event buffer readers and writers need to communicate following information:
>
|
10 Jan 2018, Andreas Suter, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
Description of the problem (starting with 61be7a1):
When starting a new experiment, creating a fresh ODB and than adding the
|
11 Jan 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
> [mhttpd,ERROR] [mhttpd.cxx:563:rread,ERROR] Cannot read file '/root', read of
> 4096 returned -1, errno 21 (Is a directory)
|
12 Jan 2018, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
> In any case, IMO, mhttpd has no business serving the contents of /root,
> or serving any files outside of the mhttpd user $HOME directory. (but also
> should not serve files from ~user/.ssh, or any other "secret" files, good
|
26 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
> > [mhttpd,ERROR] [mhttpd.cxx:563:rread,ERROR] Cannot read file '/root', read of
> > 4096 returned -1, errno 21 (Is a directory)
>
|
21 Dec 2018, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
I implemented that fix. Thank you to Andreas. Creating "Custom" directory from the web now does
not have that problem any more.
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26 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
> I implemented that fix. Thank you to Andreas. Creating "Custom" directory from the web now does
> not have that problem any more.
|
27 Dec 2018, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
> BTW, "the fix" in mhttpd unconditionally creates /Custom/Path and sets it to the value of $MIDASSYS. This path
> seems to be prepended to all file paths, so this fix also breaks the normal use of /Custom/xxx that contain the full
> path name of the file to serve...
|
27 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Bug Report, mhttpd - custom page - RHEL/Fedora
|
> I still strongly believe that mhttpd should not serve arbitrary files (only serve files explicitly listed in ODB) or as next best option,
> only serve files from subdirectories explicitly listed in ODB.
>
|
05 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Partial refactoring of ODB code
|
The current ODB code has several structural problems and I think I now figured out how to straighten them out.
Here is the problems:
|
11 Dec 2018, Stefan Ritt, Info, Partial refactoring of ODB code
|
All makes sense to me. I agree to proceed with the refactoring.
One additional comment: In the 90's when I developed this code, locking was expensive. On a decent computer you could do a couple of thousand lock operations |
26 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, Partial refactoring of ODB code
|
> One additional comment: In the 90's when I developed this code, locking was expensive.
> Now the world has changed, we can do almost a million locks a second.
|
27 Dec 2018, Stefan Ritt, Info, Partial refactoring of ODB code
|
> I am not sure this is quite true. The CPU can execute 3000 million operations per second (3GHz CPU, assuming 1 op/Hz),
> so 1 lock operation is worth 3000 normal operations. Of course cache misses and branch mispredictions mess up
> this simple arithmetic...
|
24 Sep 2018, Lars Martin, Suggestion, Self-resetting alarm class
|
I was planning to use the alarm system to display an information banner when a
certain valve is open, but I would like it to go away again when the valve is
closed.
|
24 Sep 2018, Lukas Gerritzen, Suggestion, Self-resetting alarm class
|
If you run an external script anyway, you can also call "odbedit -c alarm" to
reset all alarms. Or you could try to set the "Triggered" entry of that certain
alarm to 0 (again, with odbedit), that could also work. |
25 Sep 2018, Stefan Ritt, Suggestion, Self-resetting alarm class
|
> If you run an external script anyway, you can also call "odbedit -c alarm" to
> reset all alarms. Or you could try to set the "Triggered" entry of that certain
> alarm to 0 (again, with odbedit), that could also work.
|
26 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Suggestion, Self-resetting alarm class
|
> > If you run an external script anyway, you can also call "odbedit -c alarm" to
> > reset all alarms. Or you could try to set the "Triggered" entry of that certain
> > alarm to 0 (again, with odbedit), that could also work.
|
25 Sep 2018, Stefan Ritt, Suggestion, Self-resetting alarm class
|
> I was planning to use the alarm system to display an information banner when a
> certain valve is open, but I would like it to go away again when the valve is
> closed.
|
24 Sep 2018, Devin Burke, Forum, Implementing MIDAS on a Satellite
|
Hello Everybody,
I am a member of a satellite team with a scientific payload and I am considering
|
25 Sep 2018, Stefan Ritt, Forum, Implementing MIDAS on a Satellite
|
> Hello Everybody,
>
> I am a member of a satellite team with a scientific payload and I am considering
|
25 Sep 2018, Devin Burke, Forum, Implementing MIDAS on a Satellite
|
> > Hello Everybody,
> >
> > I am a member of a satellite team with a scientific payload and I am considering
|
26 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Forum, Implementing MIDAS on a Satellite
|
>
> Thank you for your comment Stefan. We do have some hardware resources on the board such as RAM, ROM and
> Flash storage so we wouldn't necessarily have to virtualize everything. Ideally we would like a
|
24 Oct 2018, Ryu Sawada, Info, bm_receive_event timeout in ROME
|
Hi all
There is a bug report in the ROME repository which says bm_receive_event timeouts.
|
26 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, bm_receive_event timeout in ROME
|
> There is a bug report in the ROME repository which says bm_receive_event timeouts.
> https://bitbucket.org/muegamma/rome3/issues/8/rome-with-midas-produces-timeout-after
> Does anybody have any ideas what could causing the problem ?
|
18 Dec 2018, Konstantin Olchanski, Info, mxml update
|
the mxml library was updated to make it thread-safe.
https://bitbucket.org/tmidas/mxml/src/master/
|
30 Oct 2018, Joseph McKenna, Bug Report, Side panel auto-expands when history page updates
|
One can collapse the side panel when looking at history pages with the button in
|
31 Oct 2018, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, Side panel auto-expands when history page updates
|
>
>
> One can collapse the side panel when looking at history pages with the button in
|
31 Oct 2018, Joseph McKenna, Bug Report, Side panel auto-expands when history page updates
|
> >
> >
> > One can collapse the side panel when looking at history pages with the button in
|
02 Nov 2018, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, Side panel auto-expands when history page updates
|
> I apologise for miss using the word refresh. The re-appearing sidebar was also seen with the automatic
> reload, I have implemented your fix here and it now works great!
|
02 Nov 2018, Thomas Lindner, Bug Report, Side panel auto-expands when history page updates
|
> > I apologise for miss using the word refresh. The re-appearing sidebar was also seen with the automatic
> > reload, I have implemented your fix here and it now works great!
>
|
02 Nov 2018, Stefan Ritt, Bug Report, Side panel auto-expands when history page updates
|
> Joseph's original message says that the problem is with the standard MIDAS history page, which currently use a complete reload
> when refreshing. Of course we are planning to update this history pages to only grab what it needs (as well as changing the
> plotting to use newer HTML plotting). But until that upgrade happens your fix is helpful for the history page.
|
11 Sep 2018, Francesco Renga, Forum, Launching an executable script from the sequencer
|
Dear experts,
is there any way to launch an executable script on the host computer from the MIDAS
sequencer? If not, is there any interest to develop such a feature?
|
11 Sep 2018, Pierre Gorel, Forum, Launching an executable script from the sequencer
|
> Dear experts,
> is there any way to launch an executable script on the host computer from the MIDAS
> sequencer? If not, is there any interest to develop such a feature?
|
11 Sep 2018, Stefan Ritt, Forum, Launching an executable script from the sequencer
|
> > Dear experts,
> > is there any way to launch an executable script on the host computer from the MIDAS
> > sequencer? If not, is there any interest to develop such a feature?
|