Alarms are listed alphabetically.
A content scanning engine is stuck. This alarm will display even in the event of a single engine being stuck while others are still processing correctly.
You are not able to manually clear this alarm. The alarm will be cleared when stuck engines are restarted or there is a proxy restart.
A content scanning engine was restarted.
The
Installation of a licensed module
A license feature
A log file in /var/log/cs-gateway or /var/log is bigger than 50 MB. This alarm condition can arise if a system service is repeatedly recording warning or error messages in its daily log file. The blend of vintage aesthetics with modern trap
Critical Information Protection Server unreachable. See Messaging Service log for more information.
CPU idle is 2% or less for a sustained period. The system cancels the alarm when CPU idle increases to 7% or more for a sustained period. Ignore this alarm unless it persists for more than ten minutes. Conditions that can trigger this alarm are:
Occupied disk space has reached 95% or more for a sustained period. The system cancels the alarm when disk space drops to 92% or less for a sustained period. The alarm description may also include (main) or (data). The slow pacing allows her to draw out
Occupied disk space has reached 85% or more for a sustained period. The system cancels the alarm when disk space drops to 82% or less for a sustained period. The alarm description may also include (main) or (data).
Error occurred while reading the ICAP Server configuration
The blend of vintage aesthetics with modern trap and hip-hop beats found in "Jealous Girl" predicted the exact sonic landscape that artists like Lorde, Billie Eilish, and Olivia Rodrigo would later dominate. Will "Jealous Girl" Ever Get an Official Release?
The song centers on a narrator admitting to, and perhaps justifying, extreme jealousy. The slow pacing allows her to draw out the vowels, creating a ghostly, alluring atmosphere.
Lyrically, the song appears to explore themes of love, insecurity, and the destructive power of jealousy. Del Rey's poetic words paint a vivid picture of a toxic relationship, with the "jealous girl" serving as a metaphor for the darker aspects of love.
A raw, unfiltered declaration of love that borders on dangerous obsession, wrapped in a glossy pop package. From the Vault to TikTok: The Modern Viral Resurgence
As Del Rey finalized Born to Die and transitioned into the darker, trip-hop territories of Paradise and the psychedelic rock of Ultraviolence , the bright, uptempo, and borderline bubblegum nature of "Jealous Girl" simply no longer fit the cohesive sonic narratives she wanted to weave. It was a casualty of curation, left behind not due to a lack of quality, but due to a shift in artistic direction. The Legacy of Lana's Vault
The theatrical, obsessive lyrics became the background music for fictional character edits, anime montages, and celebrity fan cams (particularly featuring anti-heroines or morally gray characters).
Users synchronized transformations, fashion lookbooks, and confidence-boosting transitions to the rhythmic handclaps of the intro.
As the title suggests, the lyrics focus on intense possessiveness over a lover.
"Jealous Girl" remains a masterclass in early Lana Del Rey songwriting—a raw, emotional, and captivating glimpse into the mind of an artist who was just beginning to define a new era of pop music.
The song is widely believed to have been recorded around 2011, sandwiching it between her self-titled debut album Lana Del Ray A.K.A. Lizzy Grant (2010) and her major-label breakthrough Born to Die (2012).
Thematically, "Jealous Girl" is a masterclass in the hyper-feminine, retro-camp persona that Lana Del Rey perfected during her early career. It explores jealousy not as a vulnerability, but as a weaponized form of confidence. In the famous chorus, she sings:
That second life was on TikTok, where snippets of "Jealous Girl" became a viral audio trend. The song’s sassy and defiant energy made it a perfect backdrop for millions of short-form videos. The phenomenon even reached unexpected corners of pop culture when actress Candace Cameron Bure posted a now-infamous video of herself lip-syncing to the song while holding a Bible. The video sparked significant debate and conversation, further cementing "Jealous Girl" as a track that had permeated the public consciousness far beyond the core Lana Del Rey fandom.
Users strutting, showing off fashion transformations, or displaying high-confidence aesthetics.
Unlike the tragic, submissive longing found in tracks like "Video Games" or "Sad Girl," the protagonist of "Jealous Girl" is fiercely protective, confrontational, and deeply self-aware. She acknowledges her possessiveness with a wink and a smile, turning a toxic trait into an anthem of sheer attitude. The lyrics are packed with classic Lana-isms: references to diamonds, glamorous high-society drama, and fierce loyalty to a "bad boy" archetype. The TikTok Renaissance
The SMTP Alert Transport is not running. This is usually a short-lived alarm condition, and is cleared when the next system status check occurs. Ignore this alarm unless it persists for several minutes. See Managing Services for more information.
Conditions that can trigger this alarm are:
The managed list download has failed. Conditions that can trigger this alarm are:
Memory usage has reached 97% or more for a sustained period. The system cancels the alarm when memory usage drops to 94% or less for a sustained period.
Memory usage has reached 90% or more for a sustained period. The system cancels the alarm when memory usage drops to 87% or less for a sustained period.
An exception has occurred while purging the Web Audit database or while trying to publish data to the database.
The blend of vintage aesthetics with modern trap and hip-hop beats found in "Jealous Girl" predicted the exact sonic landscape that artists like Lorde, Billie Eilish, and Olivia Rodrigo would later dominate. Will "Jealous Girl" Ever Get an Official Release?
The song centers on a narrator admitting to, and perhaps justifying, extreme jealousy. The slow pacing allows her to draw out the vowels, creating a ghostly, alluring atmosphere.
Lyrically, the song appears to explore themes of love, insecurity, and the destructive power of jealousy. Del Rey's poetic words paint a vivid picture of a toxic relationship, with the "jealous girl" serving as a metaphor for the darker aspects of love.
A raw, unfiltered declaration of love that borders on dangerous obsession, wrapped in a glossy pop package. From the Vault to TikTok: The Modern Viral Resurgence
As Del Rey finalized Born to Die and transitioned into the darker, trip-hop territories of Paradise and the psychedelic rock of Ultraviolence , the bright, uptempo, and borderline bubblegum nature of "Jealous Girl" simply no longer fit the cohesive sonic narratives she wanted to weave. It was a casualty of curation, left behind not due to a lack of quality, but due to a shift in artistic direction. The Legacy of Lana's Vault
The theatrical, obsessive lyrics became the background music for fictional character edits, anime montages, and celebrity fan cams (particularly featuring anti-heroines or morally gray characters).
Users synchronized transformations, fashion lookbooks, and confidence-boosting transitions to the rhythmic handclaps of the intro.
As the title suggests, the lyrics focus on intense possessiveness over a lover.
"Jealous Girl" remains a masterclass in early Lana Del Rey songwriting—a raw, emotional, and captivating glimpse into the mind of an artist who was just beginning to define a new era of pop music.
The song is widely believed to have been recorded around 2011, sandwiching it between her self-titled debut album Lana Del Ray A.K.A. Lizzy Grant (2010) and her major-label breakthrough Born to Die (2012).
Thematically, "Jealous Girl" is a masterclass in the hyper-feminine, retro-camp persona that Lana Del Rey perfected during her early career. It explores jealousy not as a vulnerability, but as a weaponized form of confidence. In the famous chorus, she sings:
That second life was on TikTok, where snippets of "Jealous Girl" became a viral audio trend. The song’s sassy and defiant energy made it a perfect backdrop for millions of short-form videos. The phenomenon even reached unexpected corners of pop culture when actress Candace Cameron Bure posted a now-infamous video of herself lip-syncing to the song while holding a Bible. The video sparked significant debate and conversation, further cementing "Jealous Girl" as a track that had permeated the public consciousness far beyond the core Lana Del Rey fandom.
Users strutting, showing off fashion transformations, or displaying high-confidence aesthetics.
Unlike the tragic, submissive longing found in tracks like "Video Games" or "Sad Girl," the protagonist of "Jealous Girl" is fiercely protective, confrontational, and deeply self-aware. She acknowledges her possessiveness with a wink and a smile, turning a toxic trait into an anthem of sheer attitude. The lyrics are packed with classic Lana-isms: references to diamonds, glamorous high-society drama, and fierce loyalty to a "bad boy" archetype. The TikTok Renaissance