Stuart Anderson wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 02:49:08PM +1000, James C. McPherson wrote:
>> Stuart Anderson wrote:
>>> Running Solaris 10 Update 3 on an X4500 I have found that it is possible
>>> to reproducibly block all writes to a ZFS pool by running "chgrp -R"
>>> on any large filesystem in that pool.  As can be seen below in the zpool
>>> iostat output below, after about 10-sec of running the chgrp command all
>>> writes to the pool stop, and the pool starts exclusively running a slow
>>> background task of 1kB reads.
>>> Is this a known issue or should I open a new case with Sun?
>> Log a new case with Sun, and make sure you supply
>> a crash dump so people who know ZFS can analyze
>> the issue.
>>
>> You can use <stop-A> sync, <break> sync, or
>>
>> reboot -dq
>>
> 
> In previous attempts, neither "halt -d" nor reboot (with no arguments)
> where able to shutdown the machine. Is "reboot -dq" really a bigger hammer
> than "halt -d"?

Kindasorta - the q option tells reboot to do its stuff with
all guns blazing, as it were.

> Sorry to be pedantic, but what is the exact key sequence on a Sun
> USB keyboard one should use to force a kernel dump on Solx86?
> Since there is no OBP on an X4500 where do I type the sync command?

first, either boot with "-k" or shortly after you get to
multiuser, run "mdb -K" on the console (and hit :c <enter>).

Then you can use <F1>A to drop to kmdb, and then run

::systemdump

or

0>rip
:c
:c

or for 32bit mode

0>eip
:c
:c


cheers,
James C. McPherson
--
Solaris kernel software engineer
Sun Microsystems
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