Glitch Forces Mars Probe Shut-Off 158
TheEvilOverlord writes to tell us that BBC News is reporting that a 'glitch' has forced the mars probe to switch into a "safe-mode" switching several of its systems off. Perhaps it is just an education tool to show martians the meaning of BSOD.
What glitch!?!? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What glitch!?!? (Score:1)
Works as Designed.
KFG
Re:What glitch!?!? (Score:2)
Re:What glitch!?!? (Score:1)
Wait a sec... (Score:1)
Relevant glitches. (Score:3, Interesting)
Why didn't they build in some means of communication for this "safe mode"? I find it rather odd that it is in a known state (safe mode) that is known to be undesirable, yet there is no fallback system (even a timed one) to get it out of this mode? How come?
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:4, Interesting)
the main problem seems to be it takes a while to get it back to normal operation and they'd really like to take some photos of the bit of mars the probe is going over soon
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:4, Informative)
In this mode, MGS turns off its science instruments but leaves many other systems on.
Presumbly this includes communications.
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:1)
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:3, Informative)
In safe mode to turns to the sun to funny charge its battery and allows communication with Earth on its low-gain antenna. Which is presumably to work out what is wrong makes changes and reboot the system.
You have to remember that this craft has been in space since 1996 so is old and might have radiation damage by now so this kind of thing is to be expected.
One worrying thing (Score:1)
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:5, Informative)
You missed the point: 'safe mode' is the fallback system. The probe is not in a 'known state'. They do not yet know what fault caused the probe to go into safe mode. Safe mode is a generic state designed to maintain power and communications with Earth when an unknown fault has occurred, to give the operators time to find a solution or just to check that everything is OK. When they are sure everything is OK they will send a command to exit safe mode.
There is reason to be cautious. An important satellite was lost a few years ago because the operators rushed their diagnosis of the problem. The satellite's operating state was not what they thought it was--two of the gyros had failed. The operators misinterpreted the data and switched the satellite from its last working gyro to one of the nonworking ones, resulting in total loss of communications and destruction of the satellite. Not good. Before they do anything, they need to be sure they understand what has happened and what state the probe is in.
Re:Relevant glitches. (Score:2)
Why didn't they build in some means of communication for this "safe mode"?
There IS a means of communication, that's how they are able to do anything to bring it out of safe mode. Specifically, it switches to the low gain antenna because that one will work even if it is not aimed accuratly. The presumption is that it would be a real shame if a simple, otherwise correctable problem ended the mission because the high gain antenna was aimed wrong. Being on low gain with a limited but existant data rate is p
wow (Score:2)
But surely they have control over which system they use, the main system is on safe mode, but the back up system isn't so why couldn't they switch to the back up and then use the "main" one as the back up if they're limited on time.
Not a big deal (Score:4, Funny)
ETA to download: 400 days remaining (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Troll? (Score:1)
Looks like someone can't handle criticism like a grown-up.
BSOD (Score:2, Funny)
Re:BSOD (Score:1)
Re:BSOD (Score:2)
The probe you have dialed has crashed into a planet. Please make a note of it.
"The" Mars Probe? (Score:5, Informative)
People, we've got be a little more precise. There are three functioning spacecraft in orbit, one more on the way, and two on the ground on and around Mars. Between NASA and the ESA, it's getting crowded on Mars.
For those who didn't RTFA, it's the Mars Global Surveyor, which is the oldest of those in orbit.
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:2)
I think the reason I stick around is to watch people mock the submitters and the editors. The problem is that they are setting themselves up as such easy targets that it's not really a sport anymore.
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:2)
That's a headline you have probably seen in a newspaper. Are you going to bite the editor's head off for not specifying which man, and what kind of car? Those details are left for TFA.
Granted, the submitter or Scuttlemonkey could have said "Global Surveyor" in the summary. I think it was just inexperience, they saw "Mars Probe" and went "duhhh, there's only one" or something like that. But even so, the Slashdot summaries are supposed to be little more than headlines anyway.
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:3, Insightful)
Imagine a newspaper headline after the hurricane:
Hurricane Destroys City
Today the city was devastated by the hurricane. More details on page 23.
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:1)
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:1)
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:2)
The Viking one and two orbiters must still be in orbit, we just can't communicate with them.
Re:"The" Mars Probe? (Score:2)
They've both been powered down for the last 30 years, so I went out on a limb and assumed that it wasn't one of those that entered safe mode. :-)
Too Early for math (Score:2)
Eh, make that twenty some odd years ago. Although the Viking 1 orbiter is coming up on 30 years out of service.
Slow Down Cowboy! Slashdot requires you to wait between each successful posting of a comment to allow everyone a fair chance at criticizing your bad math.
Well, Duh... (Score:1, Funny)
Just CTRL-ALT-DEL and this time, don't hit F8. Windows will boot normally. Duh.
Re:Well, Duh... (Score:1)
Interplanetary Adware (Score:1)
Just CTRL-ALT-DEL and this time, don't hit F8. Windows will boot normally. Duh.
But then 1800SearchAssistant will load up again and you'll be in the same boat.
Re:Well, Duh... (Score:2)
ERROR: Cannot find WIN.COM, unable to continue loading Windows.
C:\>_
Nasa? (Score:1)
Re:Nasa? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Nasa? (Score:2)
Re:Nasa? (Score:1)
I can't recall who offhand, but I remember being told there was a 1 to 5 classification for code quality given out by an internation body, and nasa is the only one in cat 5.
I believe this is mainly due to repetative code reading by hand with paper and pencil.
Re:Nasa? (Score:1)
Re:Nasa? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nasa? (Score:1)
Re:Nasa? (Score:3, Informative)
Obligatory Wikipedia Link (Score:1)
"The Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter use the VxWorks operating system running on a PowerPC platform. VxWorks is in use in several other spacecraft, and Boeing Commercial Airplanes intends to use the operating system in their new 787 airliner."
Re:Nasa? (Score:1)
Re:Nasa? (Score:1)
They do not roll their own.. Except for shuttle (Score:1, Insightful)
Windriver's OS isn't all that fancy, but it does pack a pretty small footprint when configured well.
Gotta love slashdot... Lots of p
Re:Nasa? (Score:2)
The mars global surveyor (the oldest one launched) is running a modified version of WIN95 from what I've been told in the past.
The newer rovers use an operating system called VXWORKS made by windriver. VXWORKS is kind of like a single-user based UNIX real time operating system (however, it's closed source and proprietary)
Here's the page for VXWORKS:
http://www.windriver.com/products/device_te [windriver.com]
Re:Nasa? (Score:2)
Connected to 10.0.0.2.
220 VxWorks (VxWorks5.4.2) FTP server ready
User (10.0.0.2:(none)):
So it must be reasonably common... Anyone know of any other devices that run it?
Re:Nasa? (Score:2, Informative)
Pathfinder and the two rovers are the only ones I'm sure of as far as the Mars units go but some of the other space probes, Stardust,Deep Imapct and Deep Space 1 also used VxWorks.
I do know that the "safe mode" the probe has entered means that something locked up the main program long enough for a hardware watchdog to go off, rebooting it, during boot the init code checks what state the system is in, ie; did the WD go off, and if it did then it boots a known g
Shouldn't the headline include.... (Score:5, Insightful)
There's presently functioning two orbiters (Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Odyssey), two rovers (MER A a.k.a. Spirit, MER B a.k.a. Opportunity), and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is on the way.
I realize TFA has the info but it sort of belongs in the headline. "The mars probe" just sounds silly and uninformed.
Re:Shouldn't the headline include.... (Score:1)
You mean three, ESA's Mars Express is alive and kicking!
Re:Shouldn't the headline include.... (Score:2)
Mars Express has been returning some fantastic data!
Too bad the telecommunications probe has been cancelled. =( It would really improve the data return of MSL when it gets there.
Re:Shouldn't the headline include.... (Score:1)
Ah man, I didn't hear about that. That's a huge shame!
Re:Shouldn't the headline include.... (Score:2)
It should, and TFA indicates that it is the Mars Global Surveyor [wikipedia.org] (for those of you to lazy to click over).
What sort of software is this probe running? (Score:4, Interesting)
Which embedded OS is it running? What language and programming system was used to develop the application software for it? Details, please.
Re:What sort of software is this probe running? (Score:5, Informative)
check out http://acmqueue.com/modules.php?name=Content&pa=s
-j
Re:What sort of software is this probe running? (Score:2)
My ReplayTV uses VxWorks, and it just reboots when it gets too busy. (I think it's got a "heartbeat" routine to detect when it's thrashing?)
No idea what rebooting a probe would do, though.
Re:What sort of software is this probe running? (Score:2)
ACK! No! Please tell me you jest?
Wow. And we managed to actually get a few there to do their mission?
I wonder if, like myself, NASA needed to rewrite their commandline build scripts from scratch as well... Talk about a waste of money! "Uh, it doesn't work, not even close - admit it, you guys never even tested this under ideal, nevermind real-world, conditions", "Well, send us a fix, and we'll consider making it part of the next release", "Wait, which of us has th
"Science Instruments" (Score:1)
Re:"Science Instruments" (Score:2)
Oooh... I've seen this one... (Score:2, Funny)
In Loving Memory of Krystal Koch (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:In Loving Memory of Krystal Koch (Score:2)
Re:In Loving Memory of Krystal Koch (Score:1)
tax dollars? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd say Americans are getting their money's worth and then some.
Re:tax dollars? (Score:2)
IF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY LAUNCHED A SPACE PROBE...
DHS GUY 1: It's a proud day for the Department of Homeland Security! We're going to launch a probe into outer space!
DHS GUY 2: Isn't that in Texas?
DHS GUY 1: I think it's in Nevada.
DHS GUY 2: Well there isn't time to check.
DHS GUY 1: Since it's in Nevada we'll need lots of boats to get it there.
DHS GUY 2: Did you say parade floats? Because I just wrote out a contract to Microsoft for 10000 parade f
Re:tax dollars? (Score:1)
They mentioned something about recent solar storms that could have messed with it. The radiation is pretty harsh in Mars orbit, especially near the Solar Maximum (11-year cycle), which peaked a few years ago. It seems computer components would be the first to go because they are usually the smallest and most delicate. That probe has been up there for almost a decade.
The Gallileo probe had progressively more an
Spyware (Score:2)
Damn spyware! That's the only way you'll be able to remove them. I hope they did Safe Mode with Networking Support because it's will take awhile for someone to cold boot that baby if it something goes wrong.
As John Hurt Said In Spaceballs... (Score:4, Funny)
Isn't the first time (Score:5, Informative)
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mgs/status/wkreport/curr
POSIX OS (Score:3, Informative)
The OS is VxWorks and it's been used in Sattelites, Robots and for some reason Movie editing (probably a file management system)
http://www.windriver.com/products/device_technolo
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/special/
Re:POSIX OS (Score:2)
Re:POSIX OS (Score:2)
Re:POSIX OS (Score:2)
For movie edting, I know it is used on the frontends of Euphonix System 5 [euphonix.com] mixing consoles -- the console itself, I mean, the surface with the faders, displays, buttons and knobs, runs VxWorks. The surface ties into a main DSP frame which runs Windows 2000.
Sorry Houston (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Sorry Houston (Score:2)
I wonder... (Score:2)
What the?!?!? (Score:1)
Mars Polar Lander (Score:2)
Re:Mars Polar Lander (Score:1)
The article said the Polar Lander crash site will soon be in the dark for two years (a martain year) because it is close to the pole. They want to photograph it before they launch the Pheonix Lander (about a year from now?), which uses similar technology to the Polar Lander. After they launch Pheonix, it will be too late to make any ha
10 times the fuel? (Score:2)
With science instruments, the high-gain antenna, and other systems shut down, why would the thing use 10x more fuel than us
Re:10 times the fuel? (Score:2)
Bill
Re:10 times the fuel? (Score:2)
Martian BSOD? (Score:2)
Well, why not, after all, even Bill Gates got one [spamusement.com].
Re:Safe Mode? (Score:5, Funny)
My God! It's full of stars!
Re:Safe Mode? (Score:1)
Re:Early deployment of Helicopter gunships (Score:2)
But, ya'll come back now
Re:Obviously... (Score:2)
Gotta love the Sad Mac [wikipedia.org]. Unless it got hit by a Bomb [wikipedia.org]. That's gotta suck because nobody is around to hold down the shift key.
Ah, Slashdot. (Score:1)
Re:Oh no, they found the joystick! (Score:1)
Re:hmm (Score:2)
Re:Quick! (Score:1)
Re:windows (Score:2)