jcrespi
02-14-2005, 05:45 PM
Hi,
I understand the following message that Cpanel gave me but I need advice in what is the best method. The message can be solved just changing the file and allocate more resource but I'm afraid doing that will put the server in danger of an overload.
What other suggestions do you have in order to verify what is really causing the problem. This message just started a few days ago:
IMPORTANT: Do not ignore this email.
This is cPanel cpuwatch on myserver.mydomain.com!
While processing, the cpu has been
maxed out for more then a 6 hour period. The current load/uptime line on the server at the time of this email is
16:32:46 up 1 day, 23:35, 0 users, load average: 1.17, 1.66, 2.06
You should check the server to see why the load is so high and take steps to lower the load. If you want stats to continue to run even with a high load; Edit /var/cpanel/cpanel.config and change extracpus to a number larger then 0 (run /usr/local/cpanel/startup afterwards to pickup the changes).
I understand the following message that Cpanel gave me but I need advice in what is the best method. The message can be solved just changing the file and allocate more resource but I'm afraid doing that will put the server in danger of an overload.
What other suggestions do you have in order to verify what is really causing the problem. This message just started a few days ago:
IMPORTANT: Do not ignore this email.
This is cPanel cpuwatch on myserver.mydomain.com!
While processing, the cpu has been
maxed out for more then a 6 hour period. The current load/uptime line on the server at the time of this email is
16:32:46 up 1 day, 23:35, 0 users, load average: 1.17, 1.66, 2.06
You should check the server to see why the load is so high and take steps to lower the load. If you want stats to continue to run even with a high load; Edit /var/cpanel/cpanel.config and change extracpus to a number larger then 0 (run /usr/local/cpanel/startup afterwards to pickup the changes).
