After configuration setup of Org, Service, Gateway, Application and Device, when I power up my device, the join request and accept works fine (the activation tab shows the data) followed by one uplink and one downlink. And then there is no activity. The device is supposed to be sending data every 30 sec. This device works fine with my Laird GW (preset for TTN) and TTN with OTAA - I see data every 30 sec. But that is not the case with LoRaServer. Can anyone help me please?

Hi @berkut3000

just to make sure, I set up the gw to connect to TTN and then restarted the node, I have attached the screen shots for traffic on the gw and traffic on the TTN, the node is configured to send data every 30sec, following are the snapshots:


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It is not the data issue. My node is configured for OTAA, after the node restarted, I see this sequence of events: JoinRequest/JoinAccept/DataUp/DataDown - the device is activated, but then the node stops sending the data - which is actually configured to send data every 30 sec. My node behaves just as expected with TTN.

I am using node.js and reading input from a serial port by opening a /dev/tty file, I send a command and read the result of the command and I want to close the stream once I've read and parsed all the data. I know that I'm done reading data by and end of data marker. I'm finding that once I've closed the stream my program does not terminate.

Below is an example of what I am seeing but uses /dev/random to slowly generate data (assuming your system isn't doing much). What I find is that the process will terminate once the device generates data after the stream has been closed.

No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 No more data to read from socket

 ...(Few more 'No more data to read from socket')

I didn't face this issue with the updates. I think this requires some validation on the metrics, and services if the service is up and running are you receiving some data, can you check the historical data as well?

are you using built-in metrics or customer metrics, do you have any conditions or filters added, you can validate the data again from the data explorer, are you able to see any data related to this service, you can check this by navigating to the service and check the requests through the UI.

Thanks for the heads up @Mohamed_Hamdy I have checked the metrics & historical data as well. I have been informed that there were some updates regarding the filters etc, so i started using less filters and more tags, but suddenly even with tags it seems that it is not not showing that much of data as it was showing before the update. 



By now i have stripped down the HTML for the new website to a bare minimum (see code below), disabled my .htaccess configuration, validated SSL certificates and config (ssllabs overall rating A) but still: no data.

Both individuals and organizations that work with arXivLabs have embraced and accepted our values of openness, community, excellence, and user data privacy. arXiv is committed to these values and only works with partners that adhere to them.

just switched a FP4 device with german o2 reselling provider (drillisch brand) to a FP5 device fresh from scratch on the FP5. seemingly, the mobile data network now always reverts back to ipv4 only on this FP5 machine.

in the FP4 this very same SIM (hardware) also had like a default state of ipv4 protocol only, but one could edit it to ipv4/ipv6 dual stack setting. it would stick and keep that value and mobile data allocated both ipv4 (although RFC1918) and one single global unicast ipv6 address.

I just want to thank you for sharing this approach. I just updated my DeluxeTube player tech-demo by replacing the legacy list with data list viewers and it already looks so much better! Check it out here: -a-youtube-video-player-tech-demo/

Speaking during the Life Cycle Industry Days conference here on August 1, Air Force HH-60W program manager Tracy Patrick and MH-139A program lead Lt. Col. Jacob Debevec both stated that negotiations over TDPs for the respective aircraft have been successful, with data set to be delivered in months.

Technical data packages are the essential information, such as design drawings, for building and sustaining weapon systems, which when in the hands of the Pentagon can facilitate more service-led maintenance or greater competition for sustainment contracts. The data packages themselves are often closely held by companies, with negotiations typically centering on the scope of information to provide.


We know the world runs on data, but not all data is created equal. Bad data isn't going to help you achieve your business goals, and it can lead to a plethora of other problems. Gartner, Inc. estimates that bad data costs organizations an average of $12.9 million each year.

The underlying difficulty in establishing data quality is trying to balance the four sources of poor data and tackling the correct sources at the right time. It can be hard to determine how to make the best use of limited resources (time, attention, money, etc.) at the correct time. The good news is that organizations are taking this predicament seriously. Gartner predicted that by this year, "70% of organizations will rigorously track data quality levels via metrics."

Any evaluation should begin with a technical assessment alongside a strategic top-down approach. Use a small and measurable set of key performance indicators (KPIs) to scope the business processes and data that relate to it as well as to establish a baseline for the data's fit-for-purpose quality that will improve business outcomes.

Undergirded by everyday leadership, working toward the goal of a data-conscious culture should result in a deeper, long-term advantage of genuinely recognizing the critical role that data plays throughout the organization, not just in the IT department.

People, processes and technology will all need to participate. The employees involved in a DataOps program must be committed to and focused on bringing trusted data to the company, and their performance and goals must be managed accordingly. Appropriate data KPIs will automatically lead to processes that are created and tailored to assist in reaching them. Lastly, the proper tools are required to support these processes and individuals. The correct tooling will not only assure DataOps processes involve collaboration and orchestration but will also relieve part of the burden from humans through intelligence and automation.

That means data quality isn't a "one-and-done" endeavor; it's about continuous maintenance and regular effort and investment. Success in data quality is directly connected to the budget allocated. Being a digital organization involves constantly looking for new methods to improve business models, deliver a better customer experience and explore new business avenues.

Are you saying that having the database in a separate location is new, as well as your CF upgrade? Because that certainly sounds like a viable cause for your problem. And in general, it's not a good idea.

Last Saturday, I updated my 2019 Galaxy A50 from Android 9 (Pie) to Android 11. Everything seemed to work without issues, however, I soon realized that, although I still have mobile connectivity, I am now entirely unable to access the Internet through mobile data.

I thankfully have an older phone on hand that still runs Android 9, and, when tested with it, the same SIM cards provide perfectly normal mobile data Internet in the same place. Therefore, I conclusively rule out the possibility of this being a fault pertaining to my provider or my SIM card.

At this point, the only solution I could find online was, of course, to factory reset the device. However, I am - hopefully understandably - reluctant to do so, as it would mean backing up the entirety of my personal data, losing access to every account, and more (P2P messaging data, etc.)

Check if the database is up and running and/or try to restart it.

Check if the connection to the database is still working.

If the same issue occurs frequently, the values of these parameters can be increased in the server.conf file:

com.kintana.core.server.MAX_DB_CONNECTIONS

com.kintana.core.server.MAX_ITG_DB_CONNECTIONS

com.kintana.core.server.MAX_DASHBOARD_DB_CONNECTIONS

2) 

Cause

This error indicates some problem on the Oracle side.

Ask the Database Administrator (DBA) to review Oracle logs and check if there are any errors.

See if there are any timeouts for connections to the database server.

Fix

This Oracle error occurs when a connection that has been timed out or has been staled is used to connect to the database.

Try restarting the database and run the upgrade again.


3) R&D:

"from my investigation, most likely this is an Oracle issue.

the exception "java.sql.SQLRecoverableException: No more data to read from socket" is what happens to the client when the DBMS has killed the session/connection out from under the driver. Please ask customer's DBA to check the DBMS error log, something bad was happening there at that moment. e24fc04721

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