Abstract:
A method of debugging an active unit in a computer system having an active unit for routing computer connections and a standby unit configured to route computer connections in the event the active unit fails. The method comprises the standby unit receiving synchronization data from the active unit in the form of update messages; storing the received synchronization data in local storage; receiving a request for data to be used to perform debugging on the active unit; searching local storage for the requested data; if the requested data is found on the local storage then returning that data to the source of the request; if the requested data is not found on the local storage then requesting the requested data from the active unit, receiving the requested data from the active unit, and returning the received requested data to the source of the request.

Description:
FIELD  
       [0001]     The present invention relates broadly to computer networks and backup systems configured to replace active systems in the event of failure of active systems. Specifically, the present invention is related to utilizing a standby unit to debug an active unit in a high-availability system.  
       BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
       [0002]     Troubleshooting a real-time system running in a production environment has always been a challenge due to varied configurations and traffic properties that are difficult to replicate in development labs as well as due to limited debugging tools available for use in production environments.  
         [0003]     Prior approaches to debug and resolve issues in a production environment involve running debug images in a production environment. However, this approach is not desirable because of the time it takes to set up and run a debug image. This approach cannot be performed in real time. Another approach is to replicate a similar setup in a develop lab, where engineers attempt to replicate the problem and use enhanced debug tools. Again, this approach suffers the drawback of delay, and often the problem is difficult to replicate. Yet another approach has been the exchange of logs, traces and memory dumps among customer support engineers and development engineers, which is perhaps the most time-consuming way to solve problems experienced in production environments.  
         [0004]     A source-level debugger is often used while troubleshooting in development labs. Many real-time operating systems include a debug agent that, in conjunction with a debugger running on a host machine, facilitates source-level debugging. An example of such a system is V×Works that runs the Wind DeBug (WDB) Agent to talk to a GNU debugger (GDB) application running on a Sun workstation. However, this approach is service impacting and is difficult to use in a production environment as it is intrusive and requires the CPU of the machine being debugged to be halted. Also, source-level debuggers such as V×Works need the host machine to be connected to the system to be debugged, which may pose difficulty for remotely debugging an active system.  
         [0005]     High-Availability real-time systems are characterized by minimal downtime achieved by built-in redundancy in the system architecture. The above limitations of traditional debugging methods become more significant in high-availability environment because of the intrusive nature of these methods.  
       SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
       [0006]     The present invention provides a mechanism to more effectively troubleshoot a high-availability production system by running a customized, non-intrusive source-level debugger on a hot standby unit. In one aspect, the present invention provides a method of debugging an active unit, by receiving synchronization data from the active unit in the form of update messages; storing the received synchronization data in local storage; receiving a request for data, the requested data to be used to perform debugging on the active unit; searching local storage for the requested data; if the requested data is found on the local storage then returning that data to the source of the request; if the requested data is not found on the local storage then requesting the requested data from the active unit, receiving the requested data from the active unit, and returning the received requested data to the source of the request.  
         [0007]     Other features and advantages of the present invention will be realized from reading the following detailed description, when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:  
     
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION  
       [0008]      FIG. 1  illustrates in block diagram an active computer system and a standby computer system linked together.  
         [0009]      FIG. 2  illustrates in flow diagram form a sequence of acts performed by the active computer system illustrated in  FIG. 1 .  
         [0010]      FIG. 3  illustrates in flow diagram form a sequence of acts performed by the standby computer system illustrated in  FIG. 1 . 
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION  
       [0011]     Directing attention to  FIG. 1 , in accordance with the present invention, active unit  10  is a computer system connected to another computer system, standby unit  12 , via link  14 . Active unit  10  as well as standby unit  12 , in various embodiments, can be either a single computer or a network of computers. Active unit  10  and standby unit  12  form a high-availability computer system, such as maintained by an Internet service provider (ISP), that is configured to service a plurality of connections to remote computers. In this system, standby unit  12  is configured in a similar manner as active unit  10 , such that standby unit  12  can replace active computer system  10  without service interruption to remote clients in the event that active computer system  10  fails or crashes, or exhibits characteristics leading to failure or crashes. In an embodiment, once functionality is swapped between active unit  10  and standby unit  12 , (formerly) active unit  10  becomes the standby unit for (now active) standby unit  12 , and standby unit  12  serves remote clients and sends update messages to (formerly) active unit  10 . During normal operation, in an embodiment, standby unit  12  periodically receives synchronization information from active unit  10  so that standby unit  12  is able to transition to serve as the active computer system with an acceptably small delay.  
         [0012]     Both active unit  10  and standby unit  12  maintain various databases and registers that are synchronized through update messages sent from active unit  10  to standby unit  12 . Workstation  16  is connected to active unit  10  as workstation  18  is connected to standby unit  12 . Periodic synchronization is not CPU-intensive, so standby unit  12  has available resources that can be used to perform debugging of problems experienced in active unit  10 . Because of the separation between standby unit  12  and active unit  10 , in various embodiments of the present invention, a customized and integrated debugger program can be executed on standby unit  12  to debug active unit  10 , with minimal intrusiveness and CPU consumption. In some embodiments, certain modules of the debugger program can be executed directly on active unit  10 , but such modules do not perform any intrusive function on active unit  10 . Common examples of debugging functions performed by standby unit  12  in accordance with the present invention include checking the characteristics of active unit  10  by examining data structures, variables, state machines or register values on active unit  10  that are pushed during periodic synchronization to standby unit  12 . This enables standby unit  12  to monitor the current state of subsystems and state machines, events and event characteristics specific to a subsystem, register values such as counters and statistical information and error conditions. All of the above data may not be available through an existing user interface to the system. In some cases, standby unit  12  can perform debugging by monitoring cached information received from active unit  10 .  
         [0013]     Directing attention to  FIG. 2 , a general sequence of acts performed in accordance with the push model of the present invention is illustrated. Beginning at optional decision act  20 , if a debugger is not available on standby unit  12 , non-intrusive debugger modules located on active unit  10  can be disabled (act  21 ). Otherwise, at act  22 , data is prepared and stored in an update packet. The update packet contains values relating to the monitored items described above. At act  24 , active unit  10  checks for state change or timer expiration. In the case of a state change, control returns to act  22 , where synchronization data is updated. If there is a timer expiration, control transitions to act  28 , where synchronization data collected and stored in act  22  is assembled into an update message and sent to standby unit  12 . In this manner, information is continually updated on state changes in active system  10  until a periodic timer expires. This leads to collected information to be sent via link  14  to standby unit  12 . If a “pull” interrupt is received (act  26 ) requesting specific debugged information, this information is assembled from the stored packets at act  28  or other data maintained by active unit  10 , such as IOS queues, and transmitted to standby unit  12 .  
         [0014]     Directing attention to  FIG. 3 , a general sequence of acts performed by standby unit  12  is illustrated. At step  30 , standby unit receives some debugger input. In various embodiments of the present invention, debugger input can be embodied in commands received from a network administrator working from workstation  22  or a debugger program executing on workstation  22 , or commands generated by a debugger program run in background processing mode on standby unit  12 . At act  32 , standby unit  12  parses the received debugger input. Parsing the debugger input can include determining a command or set of commands to be executed on standby unit  12 , as well as making other determinations, such as various states present in active system  10 , reading values of data structures, and the like. Control proceeds to act  34 , where commands received in the debugger input are executed. At decision act  36 , a determination is made as to whether the command executed at act  32  requires a push or pull of data. If a push is required, data required for command execution is obtained from synchronization data received from active unit  10  and maintained in local storage (act  38 ) and commands are executed further at act  40 . If a determination is made at decision act  36  that a pull is required, control transitions to act  42 , where data is obtained from active unit  10  in the form of the data package transmitted at act  28  in  FIG. 2 . Control then transitions to act  40 , where further execution of the command(s) is performed. Control transitions back to act  34 , where additional commands are executed.  
         [0015]     Active unit  10  and standby unit  12 , in various embodiments, include combinations of processors, termination cards, and universal port DSP cards, among other components known to those skilled in the art and typically found in gateway routing systems. For example, active unit  10  and standby unit  12  may include a STM-1 termination card that provides an STM-1 interface for high-density PSTN connectivity. In an embodiment, this card provides a maximum of 1890 (1953 in SS7/IMT configuration) DS0 channels (63 E1s) via a single STM-1 connection. The SDH/STM-1 trunk card is a high-density multiplex/demultiplex card that takes in an STM-1 (Synchronous Digital Hierarchy [SDH]) pipe, used to transport up to 1890 (1953 in SS7/IMT configuration) DS0 channels. Digital calls are terminated onboard the SDH/STM-1 trunk card on HDLC controllers. There are 512 HDLC controllers and each HDLC controller can be used for either a D-channel or one digital call. The SDH/STM-1 trunk card can terminate a maximum of 512 digital calls, less the number of D-channels. For example, with 63 D-channels allocated, 449 digital calls can be terminated. Additional digital calls and analog modem-originated calls are passed over the TDM bus to an available modem resource pool. The physical layer interface for the SDH/STM-1 trunk card is synchronous transport module (STM). Each SDH/STM-1 trunk card has two 155-Mbps STM physical layer interfaces which allow 1+1 fiber protection. Each SDH/STM-1 trunk card has two LC small form-factor type fiber receptacles to allow connection to single-mode optical fiber. The SDH/STM-1 trunk card supports SDH MIB RFC 1595, DS1 MIB RFC 1406, and provides support for SNMPv1 agent (RFC 1155-1157), and Management Information Base (MIB) II (RFC 1213). The SDH/STM-1 trunk card supports online insertion and removal (OIR), a feature that allows users to remove and replace trunk cards in active unit  10  and standby unit  12  while the system is operating, without disrupting other cards and their associated calls. In an embodiment, a test port is provided to test drop-and-insert testing on any DS1/E1 from an external testing device including monitoring of both transmit and receive directions on any Els with a built-in DS1/E1 interface.  
         [0016]     Active unit  10  and standby unit  12  may also include a route switch controller. In various embodiments, the route switch controller includes integrated IP switching and routing functions, high-performance programmable Layers 3 and 4 IP packet switch with 5-Gbps application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC)-based switch fabric, fully distributed Cisco Express Forwarding for optimal packet forwarding, multiple processors, capability for building integrated timing supply (BITS) clock input, and dual redundant Gigabit Ethernet egress fiber links.  
         [0017]     A CT3 interface card may also be included for high-density PSTN connectivity. This card provides a maximum of 672 channels via a single CT3 connection. The CT3 card provides standards-based M13 multiplexer capability in conjunction with local High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC) or distributed DSP resources to fully terminate up to 28 T1s. The CT3 card also includes a channel service unit (CSU) for terminating a CT3 trunk directly from a telecommunications network. This card also terminates  216  user connections.  
         [0018]     Configuration of any T1 interface contained within the CT3 interface can be provisioned independently of other CT1 interfaces included within the same CT3 facility. Therefore, users can configure the CT3 card to carry ISDN PRI trunks (each connected to a different switch type), and a variety of North American robbed-bit signaling (RBS) types such as Loop Start and Ground Start all on the same active or standby unit. Configuring the CT3 interface and the accompanying PRI/T1 trunks can be performed using a command-line interface (CLI). A CT3/216 Termination Card can also be provided in active unit  10  and standby unit  12  to provide physical termination for up to 24 E1 R2s, PRIs, or intermachine trunks (IMTs). An active unit or standby unit using four 24-port interface cards can fully terminate up to 86 E1 trunks or 96 T1 trunks. The E1/T1 interface ports on these trunk cards can be configured independently of any other interface. Non-intrusive monitoring of individual E1/T1 PRI signals is available at the front of the E1/T1 termination card via standard 100-ohm bantam jacks.  
         [0019]     A 324-port DSP card can also be included in active unit  10  and standby unit  12 . These DSP ports are fully consistent with the any-to-any, fully pooled model for DSP resources in active unit  10  or standby unit  12 .  
         [0020]     While a system and method for performing non-intrusive debugging of an active unit by a standby unit have been described and illustrated in detail, it is to be understood that many modifications can be made to various embodiments of the present invention without departing from the spirit thereof.