Back Midas Rome Roody Rootana
  Midas DAQ System, Page 62 of 146  Not logged in ELOG logo
IDdown Date Author Topic Subject
  1696   17 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiForumHistory plot problems for frontend with multiple indicies
> [local:e666:S]History>ls -l /History/Events
> Key name                        Type    #Val  Size  Last Opn Mode Value
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 1                               STRING  1     10    2m   0   RWD  FeDummy02
> 0                               STRING  1     16    2m   0   RWD  Run transitions

Something is very broken. There should be more entries here, at least
there should be entries for "FeDummy01" and usually there is also an entry
for "FeDummy" because one invariably runs fedummy without "-i" at least once.

The fact that changing from "midas" storage to "file" storage makes no difference
also indicates that something is very broken.

I want to debug this.

Since you tried the "file" storage, can you send me the output of "ls -l mhf*.dat" in the directory
with the history files? (it should have the "*.hst" files from the "midas" storage and "mhf*.dat" files
from the "file" storage.

K.O.
  1695   17 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiInfoNew history plot facility
> > On the mhttpd side, please capture the stack trace from the crash
> 
> here comes the stack trace (only happens when using safari 12.1.2 macOS 10.14.6):
> 
> #10 0x000000000041ce0f in check_digest_auth ...
>

The crash is in check_digest_auth() which checks the mongoose web server password (if not using 
password protection from the https proxy i.e. apache httpd).

If so you should see this crash on all pages, not just when you access history pages, yes?

Ok, I just checked, my safari is "Version 12.1.2 (13607.3.10)" and I see no immediate crash, even on 
history pages.

But I am macos 10.13.6, maybe that makes a difference.

If you see the safari crash on all pages, then it is not history-specific.

In this case, I would like you to file a bug report on bitbucket "mhttpd crash with safari" and we follow up 
on it there.

K.O.
  1694   17 Sep 2019 Andreas SuterInfoNew history plot facility
> On the mhttpd side, please capture the stack trace from the crash: enable 
> core dumps (ODB "/experiment/enable core dumps" set to "y", after the crash, 
> run "ls -l core.*; gdb mhttpd core.9999") or run mhttpd inside gdb or attach 
> gdb to a running mhttpd (gdb -p 9999). Once in gdb, run "info thr" to list all 
> threads, "thr 0; bt", "thr 1; bt", etc to get stack traces from all threads, only 
> one of them contains the crash (tedious!).
> 
> Email me the stack trace (or post here), in case we want to look at values
> of any variables from the crash, keep the core dump and do not rebuild 
> mhttpd.
> 
> K.O.

here comes the stack trace (only happens when using safari 12.1.2 macOS 10.14.6):

(gdb) thr 1
[Switching to thread 1 (Thread 0x7f57ceffd700 (LWP 3538))]
#0  0x00007f57f29fe377 in raise () from /lib64/libc.so.6
(gdb) bt
#0  0x00007f57f29fe377 in raise () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#1  0x00007f57f29ffa68 in abort () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#2  0x00007f57f330e7d5 in __gnu_cxx::__verbose_terminate_handler() () from
/lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#3  0x00007f57f330c746 in ?? () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#4  0x00007f57f330c773 in std::terminate() () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#5  0x00007f57f330c993 in __cxa_throw () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#6  0x00007f57f330cf2d in operator new(unsigned long) () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#7  0x00007f57f336ba19 in std::string::_Rep::_S_create(unsigned long, unsigned long,
std::allocator<char> const&)
    () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#8  0x00007f57f336c62b in std::string::_Rep::_M_clone(std::allocator<char> const&,
unsigned long) ()
   from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#9  0x00007f57f336ccfc in std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>,
std::allocator<char> >::basic_string(std::string const&) () from /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
#10 0x000000000041ce0f in check_digest_auth (hm=hm@entry=0x7f57ceffc520, auth=0x74b060
<auth_mg>)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mhttpd.cxx:17143
#11 0x0000000000452a61 in handle_http_message (msg=0x7f57ceffc520, nc=0x2019ca0,
this=<optimized out>, 
    this=<optimized out>, this=<optimized out>) at
/home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mhttpd.cxx:17703
#12 handle_http_event_mg (nc=nc@entry=0x2019ca0, ev=ev@entry=100,
ev_data=ev_data@entry=0x7f57ceffc520)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mhttpd.cxx:17753
#13 0x0000000000464c4b in mg_call (nc=nc@entry=0x2019ca0, 
    ev_handler=0x4521f0 <handle_http_event_mg(mg_connection*, int, void*)>, ev=100, 
    ev_data=ev_data@entry=0x7f57ceffc520) at
/home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:2120
#14 0x000000000046790e in mg_http_call_endpoint_handler (nc=nc@entry=0x2019ca0,
ev=<optimized out>, 
    hm=hm@entry=0x7f57ceffc520) at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:4946
#15 0x0000000000467e3f in mg_http_handler (nc=nc@entry=0x2019ca0, ev=ev@entry=3, 
    ev_data=ev_data@entry=0x7f57ceffcb2c) at
/home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:5139
#16 0x0000000000464c4b in mg_call (nc=nc@entry=0x2019ca0, 
    ev_handler=0x467a20 <mg_http_handler(mg_connection*, int, void*)>,
ev_handler@entry=0x0, ev=ev@entry=3, 
    ev_data=ev_data@entry=0x7f57ceffcb2c) at
/home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:2120
#17 0x0000000000464fb7 in mg_recv_common (nc=nc@entry=0x2019ca0,
buf=buf@entry=0x7f57c0000cd0, len=len@entry=279)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:2676
#18 0x00000000004659c8 in mg_if_recv_tcp_cb (len=279, buf=0x7f57c0000cd0, nc=0x2019ca0)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:2680
#19 mg_read_from_socket (conn=0x2019ca0) at
/home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:3378
#20 mg_mgr_handle_conn (nc=0x2019ca0, fd_flags=1, now=now@entry=1568705761.3290441)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:3511
#21 0x0000000000465ee0 in mg_mgr_poll (mgr=mgr@entry=0x7f57ceffcda0,
timeout_ms=timeout_ms@entry=1000)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:3687
#22 0x0000000000466085 in per_connection_thread_function (param=0x2019ca0)
    at /home/nemu/nemu/tmidas/midas/progs/mongoose6.cxx:3805
#23 0x00007f57f39c7ea5 in start_thread () from /lib64/libpthread.so.0
#24 0x00007f57f2ac68cd in clone () from /lib64/libc.so.6
  1693   16 Sep 2019 Nick HastingsForumHistory plot problems for frontend with multiple indicies
Hi Konstantin,

thanks for your reply.

> > thanks for your reply. I can confirm that your suggested workaround does indeed
> > make the problem dissapear.
> > I guess this issue hasn't been seen at T2K since we use MYSQL for the history.
> 
> I think you found the source of the problem, confused event id assignments. To confirm,
> can you email me (or post here) the output of odbedit "ls -l /History/Events".

Sorry, do you want this for after I've applied the fix suggested by Ben or with the original code 
that I posted.

With the original code it only shows one fe even though both are running:

[local:e666:S]History>ls -l /History/Events
Key name                        Type    #Val  Size  Last Opn Mode Value
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                               STRING  1     10    2m   0   RWD  FeDummy02
0                               STRING  1     16    2m   0   RWD  Run transitions

[local:e666:S]History> scl
Name                Host
mhttpd              localhost           
fedummy01           localhost           
fedummy02           localhost           
ODBEdit             localhost           
Logger              localhost           
[local:e666:S]History>ls "/History/Display/Default/Dummy/
Timescale                       1h
Zero ylow                       n
Show run markers                y
Show values                     y
Sort Vars                       n
Log axis                        n
Minimum                         0
Maximum                         0
Variables
                                FeDummy01:Data
                                FeDummy02:Data
Label
                                
                                
Colour
                                #00AAFF
                                #FF9000
Factor
                                0
                                0
Offset
                                0
                                0
Buttons
                                10m
                                1h
                                3h
                                12h
                                24h
                                3d
                                7d
Formula
                                
                                
Show old vars                   n

> If that's the problem, you can avoid it completely by switching to a history storage method
> that does not rely on magic mapping between equipment names and numeric event id's:
> try the "FILE" method (set odb /Logger/History/FILE/Active to "y", restart the logger) or
> the "MYSQL" method (you will need to setup a mysql database). You tell mhttpd and mhist which 
> history data to read by setting ODB /History/LoggerHistoryChannel to one of the channel names 
> from /logger/history/, restart mhttpd. (mhttpd and mhist used to print a message "reading history 
> data from channel XXX", but somebody removed this message).

Using the orginal code I posted and switching from MIDAS history to FILE history did not seem to 
change the random behaviour in the history plots.

Regards,

Nick.
  1692   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiForumHistory plot problems for frontend with multiple indicies
> thanks for your reply. I can confirm that your suggested workaround does indeed
> make the problem dissapear.
> I guess this issue hasn't been seen at T2K since we use MYSQL for the history.

I think you found the source of the problem, confused event id assignments. To confirm,
can you email me (or post here) the output of odbedit "ls -l /History/Events".

If that's the problem, you can avoid it completely by switching to a history storage method
that does not rely on magic mapping between equipment names and numeric event id's:
try the "FILE" method (set odb /Logger/History/FILE/Active to "y", restart the logger) or
the "MYSQL" method (you will need to setup a mysql database). You tell mhttpd and mhist which 
history data to read by setting ODB /History/LoggerHistoryChannel to one of the channel names 
from /logger/history/, restart mhttpd. (mhttpd and mhist used to print a message "reading history 
data from channel XXX", but somebody removed this message).

K.O.
  1691   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiForumHistory plot problems for frontend with multiple indicies
> it's probably better to run a multi-threaded setup, than individual frontends.

I recommend against using multiple threads if at all possible and unless absolutely required.

Only for one reason: multithreaded c++ programs are notoriously hard to debug.

In addition, one has to face several classes of bugs absent in single-threaded applications:

a) which thread "owns" which object
b) locking of all shared data
c) huge overheads from locking at high data rates (a performance bug)
d) correct locking order, dead locks, live locks
e) incomprehensible core dumps and stack traces
f) race conditions

To control 2 power supplies, run 2 frontend programs, 1 per power supply.

To control 64 frontend cards, run 1 frontend with many threads: 64 (per device) + 1 (main thread) + 1 (RPC handler) + 1 
(watchdog) + 1 (common event generator/data transmitter) + 1 (odb/web page status update). You *will* bump into each 
and every one of the problems (a) to (f) above.

K.O.
  1690   16 Sep 2019 Stefan RittInfoNew history plot facility
>  Also the new system is still incomplete, i.e. there is no trivial way to save a history plot into a file:

That has been implemented in meantime. Just click on the download arrow and you can save the current window in CSV or PNG format.

Stefan
  1689   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiForumHistory plot problems for frontend with multiple indicies
> My first question would be why are you using several font-ends at all? That makes things more 
> complicated than needed. In the normal FE framework, you can define either several equipment 
> served by one frontend, or even one equipment linked to several devices.

I am the culprit here, as I wrote the original code for T2K/ND280 that Nick is looking at.

At the time, we needed to control multiple units of identical equipment. Most of these equipments
needed to be controlled independently from each other, so we could not/did not want to use
one single frontend executable to control all of them at the same time. For example, for equipment
not in use, we can stop the corresponding frontend. In case of trouble, we can restart
the corresponding frontend without disrupting the frontends for the other equipments.

The successful operation of the T2K/ND280 experiment is sufficient defence for the validity of this approach.

One lesson learned was that the MIDAS frontend framework did not make it easy to have multiple identical frontends 
for controlling multiple identical equipments. (typical use is control of 2-3 Wiener power supplies, 1-2-3 UPS 
devices, etc). At the time (and today), only the "i NNN" flag is available to tell the frontend "who am I?". To make it 
work, one has to use the hard to "%02d" stuff in the equipment name, and there are other complications. For my 
"next generation" of frontends, I tried to specialize the frontend executables at compile time using C/C++ 
preprocessor defines (-Dwiener01, -Dwiener02, etc), this worked better, but still not super happy.

My current solution as implemented by the tmfe frontend framework is to give the user full control
over the command line arguments (mfe.c did not permit any "user arguments" and did not allow
access to argc/argv) and full control over the equipment names (mfe.c equipment names are fixed at compile time).

K.O.
  1688   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiInfoNew history plot facility
> During my visit at TRIUMF we rewrote the history plotting functionality of midas.

This is a most amazing achievement. We wanted to do this "for years" and I think we have
benefitted greatly from the delay - tools available for building interactive web graphics
have improved so much so recently.

For example, delivering binary data from mhttpd to javascript (avoiding json encoding and decoding
saves tons of CPU cycles) went from "how do I do this?!?" to "I did it in only 3 hours!".

> We are now in a state where this is still work in progress, but already at this stage it might
> be useful for others to report any feedback.

The old gif-based history plots took a lot of effort and a long time to get where they work well
for most experiments and where we are happy with them.

From the TRIUMF side of things, lots of polishing of the graphics and of the user interface came
through use at our bigger experiments - TWIST (TRIUMF), ALPHA (CERN), T2K/ND280 (Japan).

So, much improvement and polishing of the new graphics is still ahead for us.

> Simply upgrade the the newest develop branch of midas, and you will see two menu items 
> "OldHistory" which is the old system and "History" which is the new system.

I hope to start the new release branch for midas-2019-09 soon. For the release, we will try
to have both the old and the new history graphics to integrate smoothly. The old graphics
still has to work well, as some users may prefer the old graphics and the old user interface.

Also the new system is still incomplete, i.e. there is no trivial way to save a history plot into a file:

> Following items are planned, but not yet implemented:
> - Printing of run markers as in the old history
> - Export / Printing / Sending to ELOG any history plot

K.O.
  1687   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiInfoNew history plot facility
> I see currently quite often is the error hs_read_arraybuffer (see the 
attachement).
> Are there ways to get a log which would document where the problems 
start?
> [also crash of mhttpd]

We can debug it from both ends, javascript and mhttpd:

On the web page, the error message says "see javascript console", do you see 
anything there?

Or the tab is so hung-up that you cannot even access the console? In this 
case, can you open the console before running your test?

In some browsers (firefox, google-chrome) this will also activate the javascript 
debugger and as likely as not will make the bug go away (ouch!)

On the mhttpd side, please capture the stack trace from the crash: enable 
core dumps (ODB "/experiment/enable core dumps" set to "y", after the crash, 
run "ls -l core.*; gdb mhttpd core.9999") or run mhttpd inside gdb or attach 
gdb to a running mhttpd (gdb -p 9999). Once in gdb, run "info thr" to list all 
threads, "thr 0; bt", "thr 1; bt", etc to get stack traces from all threads, only 
one of them contains the crash (tedious!).

Email me the stack trace (or post here), in case we want to look at values
of any variables from the crash, keep the core dump and do not rebuild 
mhttpd.

K.O.
  1686   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiBug Reporthttps redirect and ODB access
> I'm not sure if these issues are related or not, but I'm getting an error
> message when I want to access the root of the ODB via the webserver:
> [mhttpd,ERROR] [mhttpd.cxx:563:rread,ERROR] Cannot read file '/root', read of
> 4096 returned -1, errno 21 (Is a directory)

This is an old bug. It was part of the "custom path" confusion. Fixed (I think) in all midas-2019 
releases.

To confirm, which version are you using (run "odbedit ver" or look on the mhttpd "help" page)?

If you have an older version, I recommend that you update to midas-2019-03 (cd midas; git pull; 
git checkout midas-2019-03; make clean; make).

If you feel adventurous, you can also update to the head of the development version
and see all the new features (cmake, c++11, new history pages).

If you do not feel adventurous, wait until we have midas-2019-09 ready, use midas-2019-03 
until then.

K.O.
  1685   16 Sep 2019 Konstantin OlchanskiForumOpen a hotlink to a single element in an ODB array
> Is it possible to open a hotlink to a single element in an ODB array?

Not possible.

> sprintf(element, "%s[%d]", path, i);
> db_find_key(hDB, hv_info->hKeyRoot, element, &hKey);

There is some confusion and inconsistency between db_xxx() functions,
some of them accept the array index "a[10]" syntax, some do not.

db_find_key() and db_watch()/db_open_record() do not operate on array elements
and do not accept the "a[10]" array index syntax.

K.O.
  1684   13 Sep 2019 Pintaudi GiorgioInfoHistory panels in custom pages
Dear Stefan,
thank you very much for the prompt reply. Your suggestions worked wonderfully. Now I can display all the plots that I want where I want.
The new JavaScript history plots are really a huge improvement over the old ones.
Thank you again
Giorgio




Stefan Ritt wrote:
Indeed there was a bug in some JavaScript code, which I fixed here: https://bitbucket.org/tmidas/midas/commits/d2b1a783240e252820c622001e15c09c5d7798c0

Note that your code will bring you the "old style" history panels (with GIF images). If you want the new style (interactive canvas panels), you need the following:

1) Add

<script src="mhistory.js"></Script>

to the top of your custom page

2) Add "mhistory_init();" to the "onload" function of your page, like

<body class="mcss" onloas="mhttpd_init('Example');mhistory_init();">

3) Change the class of the panel from "mhistory" to "mjhistory", like

<div class="mjshistory" data-group=...>


Best regards,
Stefan
  1683   12 Sep 2019 Stefan RittInfoHistory panels in custom pages
Indeed there was a bug in some JavaScript code, which I fixed here: https://bitbucket.org/tmidas/midas/commits/d2b1a783240e252820c622001e15c09c5d7798c0

Note that your code will bring you the "old style" history panels (with GIF images). If you want the new style (interactive canvas panels), you need the following:

1) Add

<script src="mhistory.js"></Script>

to the top of your custom page

2) Add "mhistory_init();" to the "onload" function of your page, like

<body class="mcss" onloas="mhttpd_init('Example');mhistory_init();">

3) Change the class of the panel from "mhistory" to "mjhistory", like

<div class="mjshistory" data-group=...>


Best regards,
Stefan
  1682   12 Sep 2019 Pintaudi GiorgioInfoHistory panels in custom pages
> > A new tag has been implemented to display history panels in custom pages, integrated in the
> > new custom page design from 2017. The full documentation can be found at
> >
>
> As part of consolidating/cleaning the MIDAS Wiki documentation, the "New Custom Pages" was folded into the main "Custom Page". So to see a
> description of Stefan's new functionality please go to
>
> https://midas.triumf.ca/MidasWiki/index.php/Custom_Page#mhistory

Hello!

I am trying to use the new mhistory panels in the WAGASCI slow control custom page, but I cannot get them to work.
All I get is an empty frame. Anyway, in the History tab I can see the history plots correctly.


Here is a minimal example:
<html>
<head>
   <title>Test</title>
   <link rel="stylesheet" href="midas.css">
   <script src="controls.js"></script>
   <script src="midas.js"></script>
   <script src="mhttpd.js"></script>
</head>
<body class="mcss" onload="mhttpd_init('Test');">

<div id="mheader"></div>
<div id="msidenav"></div>

<div id="mmain">
  <div name="mhistory" data-group="Test" data-panel="Test" data-scale="1m" style="width:600px;border:1px solid black;"></div>
</div>
</body>
</html>

Of course, the "Test" group and "Test" panel exist in the ODB and are correctly shown in the History tab. No error is shown in the console of the web browser.
I am using the latest version of MIDAS as of September 12.

Can you confirm that this feature is working in the latest MIDAS? If yes, how can I troubleshoot the problem?

Regards
Giorgio
  1681   10 Sep 2019 Andreas SuterInfoNew history plot facility
Our typical use case is that a lot of people are connected to the experiment
having some history tabs open most of the time. Hence, I setup a test system and
connect to it from all kind of systems/browsers. What I see currently quite
often is the error hs_read_arraybuffer (see the attachement).

For firefox 60.8.0esr this can result into a full freeze of the tab and only
closing it is possible.

For chromium based browsers you eventually get a popup informing that it is not
responsive anymore.

The worst though is safari 12.1.2 which not only freezes the tab, but
reproducibly crashes the mhttpd on the server side.

Are there ways to get a log which would document where the problems start?  
Attachment 1: history_hangs.PNG
history_hangs.PNG
  1680   08 Sep 2019 Vinzenz BildsteinBug Reporthttps redirect and ODB access
I'm not sure if these issues are related or not, but I'm getting an error
message when I want to access the root of the ODB via the webserver:
[mhttpd,ERROR] [mhttpd.cxx:563:rread,ERROR] Cannot read file '/root', read of
4096 returned -1, errno 21 (Is a directory)

I also tried turning the re-direct from http to https off, but this does not
seem to work. I also noticed that the redirect changes the localhost into a
hostname. Where does mongoose take this hostname from?

EDIT: Seems that the change of the hostname is due to a setting in /etc/hosts,
i.e. all my fault ...

EDIT: I think there was some issue with the mhttpd. When I checked the output (I
used screen to run it), it was full of these messages:

ss_semaphore_wait_for: semop/semtimedop(2588679) returned -1, errno 43
(Identifier removed)
al_check: Something is wrong with our semaphore, ss_semaphore_wait_for()
returned 408, aborting.
al_check: Cannot abort - this will lock you out of odb. From this point, MIDAS
will not work correctly. Please read the discussion at
https://midas.triumf.ca/elog/Midas/945

Restarted it and it stopped redirecting. So accessing the root of the ODB via
the webserver is the only issue now.
  1679   08 Sep 2019 Stefan RittInfoNew history plot facility
> 1) it would be nice to have an option to format the label output (see attachment 1)

I fixed that in the current version.

Stefan
Attachment 1: Screenshot_2019-09-08_at_12.29.12_.png
Screenshot_2019-09-08_at_12.29.12_.png
  1678   07 Sep 2019 Stefan RittInfoNew history plot facility
> This I found out, yet the attachment here shows another case where it would be useful to be
> able to disable the background, namely if you have positive and negative measures in one
> plot. Somehow it suggests that CH1 and CH2 show very different values, whereas it is only a
> difference in the sign of this variables.

Ok, I added an option which lets you switch off the background. 

I also changed the background drawing such that it only goes to the y=0 axis, not the bottom of the screen. 
That should help displaying negative values.

Stefan
Attachment 1: Screenshot_2019-09-07_at_13.52.49_.png
Screenshot_2019-09-07_at_13.52.49_.png
Attachment 2: Slow-Sine_3-20198107-132905-20198107-135305.png
Slow-Sine_3-20198107-132905-20198107-135305.png
  Draft   07 Sep 2019 Stefan RittInfoNew history plot facility
> This I found out, yet the attachment here shows another case where it would be useful to be
> able to disable the background, namely if you have positive and negative measures in one
> plot. Somehow it suggests that CH1 and CH2 show very different values, whereas it is only a
> difference in the sign of this variables.

Ok, I added 

- a correction which does the fill not to the bottom of the window, but only to the y=0 axis.
- a flag "Show graph fille" which lets you turn on and off the filling for each plot

Best,
Stefan
ELOG V3.1.4-2e1708b5