Message boards :
Number crunching :
All tasks carshing with NS_ERROR_FAILURE error
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Send message Joined: 12 Jul 11 Posts: 95 Credit: 1,129,876 RAC: 0 |
Hi As described [url=https://lhcathome.cern.ch/lhcathome/forum_thread.php?id=5567 ]in this topic[/url] (I initially thought the issue was only related to theory application) all the tasks are crashing on my new iMac with a NS_ERROR_FAILURE error, on any VB application. Any idea ? Thanks. |
Send message Joined: 12 Jul 11 Posts: 95 Credit: 1,129,876 RAC: 0 |
No idea about this problem ? I can't participate to LHC anymore :( (For some reason the link was broken above) |
Send message Joined: 9 Jan 15 Posts: 151 Credit: 431,596,822 RAC: 0 |
Could be MacOSX issue but not sure. Mix of solution on google and virtualbox forum for this. On linux it could be updated to kernel headers, reinstall or add dkms. Some solve it to move to anothe location or add extension. Related to thread https://lhcathome.cern.ch/lhcathome/forum_thread.php?id=5567 My post https://lhcathome.cern.ch/lhcathome/forum_thread.php?id=5567&postid=43959 |
Send message Joined: 15 Jun 08 Posts: 2413 Credit: 226,473,599 RAC: 131,992 |
A minor issue (but not a show stopper): https://lhcathome.cern.ch/lhcathome/show_host_detail.php?hostid=10675031 The GFLOPs values show exactly 1 GFLOPs, hence the BOINC benchmarks should be run. 2nd minor issue (also not a show stopper): VirtualBox guest extensions should be installed. Your main issue: I didn't look deeper but the messages in your error log point out a permissions issue or an incomplete VirtualBox installation. Similar discussions can be found in the VirtualBox forum. |
Send message Joined: 29 Sep 04 Posts: 281 Credit: 11,859,285 RAC: 0 |
Not sure if this is helpful as my hosts are Windows but I'll post anyway. The website for a new bank account I set up insisted I install Trusteer Rapport security. I've been concentrating on Covid projects since the Spring so didn't notice any issues until I recently tried to run some VBox tasks here. All failed at VM startup. I had done nothing else to that host so I concluded that Rapport might be the cause, being overenthusiastic about its security role. Uninstalling it resolved the problem. Maybe worth checking if an Antivirus or Security program is being similarly overprotective and exclude Boinc and VBox from its shields and scans if it allows that. |
Send message Joined: 19 Feb 08 Posts: 708 Credit: 4,336,250 RAC: 0 |
I had to uninstall the McAfee antivirus on both Windows 10 hosts where it had been loaded by HP because Atlas and Theory could not run with VirtualBox. Tullio |
Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 418 Credit: 5,667,249 RAC: 3 |
Not sure if this is helpful as my hosts are Windows but I'll post anyway.Wow, your bank chose your security program? I'd have changed bank. No company tells me what to do with my computer. |
Send message Joined: 12 Jul 11 Posts: 95 Credit: 1,129,876 RAC: 0 |
You can see in the other topic that it's working now, for CMS. I have a stock of theory + CMS + Atlas (+ also 6tracks non VB tasks) so I'll if all goes well. |
Send message Joined: 12 Jul 11 Posts: 95 Credit: 1,129,876 RAC: 0 |
+ it's always better to exclude the boinc data directory (and main branch also, depending on your OS) from any antivirus. |
Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 418 Credit: 5,667,249 RAC: 3 |
+ it's always better to exclude the boinc data directory (and main branch also, depending on your OS) from any antivirus.Windows 10, AVG Free, never had to exclude Boinc. All I've excluded is pirate serial generators. |
Send message Joined: 12 Jul 11 Posts: 95 Credit: 1,129,876 RAC: 0 |
Any time I have heard of "antivirus + boinc" together in the past 15 years, it was about problems and not solutions :) |
Send message Joined: 15 Nov 14 Posts: 602 Credit: 24,371,321 RAC: 0 |
Any time I have heard of "antivirus + boinc" together in the past 15 years, it was about problems and not solutions :) Having never had a virus in 25 years on the Internet, but having had to reinstall Windows several times due to antivirus file corruptions, I use only the most reliable AV's possible. That is usually Microsoft's, which is trouble-free for the most part. But I do most of my crunching on Linux, which avoids the problem anyway. |
Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 418 Credit: 5,667,249 RAC: 3 |
Microsoft's anti virus is well known for only spotting about 50% of viruses, it's as good as a chocolate teapot. There was a virus in the late 90s which would install itself as you were trying to install windows. You had to get a service pack on before connecting to the internet, as all it needed was an infected computer anywhere on the internet to randomly try your IP address and put it in. A major security hole in Windows of some kind. Might not have got past decent routers, but people had modems back then without built in firewalls. I encountered it where I worked in a University, which had a raw internet connection right to the socket in the room.Any time I have heard of "antivirus + boinc" together in the past 15 years, it was about problems and not solutions :) The only problem I've ever had with AV software is slowing the system down a bit. Or someone installing two of them and they fight. |
Send message Joined: 15 Nov 14 Posts: 602 Credit: 24,371,321 RAC: 0 |
The only problem I've ever had with AV software is slowing the system down a bit. Or someone installing two of them and they fight. You haven't run all the TV recording programs and disk caches that I have, among others. I can go without an AV entirely if I have to. I have found that if you don't install the viruses, you don't get them. |
Send message Joined: 15 Nov 14 Posts: 602 Credit: 24,371,321 RAC: 0 |
There was a virus in the late 90s which would install itself as you were trying to install windows. You had to get a service pack on before connecting to the internet, as all it needed was an infected computer anywhere on the internet to randomly try your IP address and put it in. That was a port vulnerability (e.g., Code Red) that occurred before any AV could even be installed. You need to be behind a firewall first. |
Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 418 Credit: 5,667,249 RAC: 3 |
You haven't run all the TV recording programs and disk caches that I have, among others.Anything goes wrong with AV, I can always exclude that program from its checking. I can go without an AV entirely if I have to. I have found that if you don't install the viruses, you don't get them.Indeed. They come only from: Running the attachment in an email that's obviously a scam (Microsoft are half to blame for this - this nonsense about hiding the extension, so you get "Waterfall.jpg.exe" emailed to you, you see Waterfall.jpg, think it's a picture of a waterfall, and it actually runs the virus). Or downloading pirate games/software. But then you can just check the file at Total Virus online, and it's scanned with 50 of them. |
Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 418 Credit: 5,667,249 RAC: 3 |
I just installed the patch to stop the vulnerability first, which in that case was a service pack. I downloaded the service pack on another machine and preinstalled it from a CD without putting it on the network. It was amazing how fast the virus got in.There was a virus in the late 90s which would install itself as you were trying to install windows. You had to get a service pack on before connecting to the internet, as all it needed was an infected computer anywhere on the internet to randomly try your IP address and put it in. |
Send message Joined: 15 Nov 14 Posts: 602 Credit: 24,371,321 RAC: 0 |
Running the attachment in an email that's obviously a scam (Microsoft are half to blame for this - this nonsense about hiding the extension, so you get "Waterfall.jpg.exe" emailed to you, you see Waterfall.jpg, think it's a picture of a waterfall, and it actually runs the virus).Yes I use MailWasher (free version works for me) to screen all my emails on the server before they even get to my machine. https://www.mailwasher.net/ It is obvious what the spam is. |
Send message Joined: 12 Aug 06 Posts: 418 Credit: 5,667,249 RAC: 3 |
My ISP (Plusnet in the UK) removes 99% of spam and viruses for me (I can turn it off or adjust it on their website). The 1% that get through I either filter with Opera Mail on my computer, or spot them manually and delete them. They're not dangerous, just tedious.Running the attachment in an email that's obviously a scam (Microsoft are half to blame for this - this nonsense about hiding the extension, so you get "Waterfall.jpg.exe" emailed to you, you see Waterfall.jpg, think it's a picture of a waterfall, and it actually runs the virus).Yes I use MailWasher (free version works for me) to screen all my emails on the server before they even get to my machine. I used a relative's computer the other week, and was astonished at how much crap was all over a webpage I tried to use. I'd forgotten just how much my 11 adblockers remove. |
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