On Thursday 05 December 2002 00:36, Brian Waite wrote: > I tried that but things look pretty happy. Here is the output I get with > tcpdump -vvv -s 1500 host seblade2 > > I know this NFS root is set up because other PPC boxes use it for NFS root. > I am pretty stumped. > > 17:32:19.528377 seblade2.800 > dayton.sunrpc: [udp sum ok] udp 56 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 84) > 17:32:19.528732 dayton.sunrpc > seblade2.800: [udp sum ok] udp 28 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 56) > 17:32:19.559211 seblade2.800 > dayton.sunrpc: [udp sum ok] udp 56 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 84) > 17:32:19.559469 dayton.sunrpc > seblade2.800: [udp sum ok] udp 28 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 56) > 17:32:19.579903 seblade2.800 > dayton.32771: [udp sum ok] udp 56 (DF) (ttl > 64, id 0, len 84) > 17:32:19.585120 dayton.32771 > seblade2.800: [udp sum ok] udp 60 (DF) (ttl > 64, id 0, len 88) > 17:32:19.585790 seblade2.159747 > dayton.nfs: 100 getattr fh Unknown/1 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 128) > 17:32:19.585865 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159747: reply ok 96 getattr DIR 40755 > ids 0/0 sz 4096 (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 124) > 17:32:19.586681 seblade2.159748 > dayton.nfs: 100 fsstat fh Unknown/1 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 128) > 17:32:19.586781 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159748: reply ok 48 fsstat [|nfs] > (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 76) > 17:32:19.615317 seblade2.159749 > dayton.nfs: 108 lookup fh Unknown/1 "dev" > (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 136) > 17:32:19.615396 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159749: reply ok 128 lookup fh > Unknown/1 DIR 40755 ids 0/0 sz 77824 nlink 17 rdev ffffffff fsid 306 nodeid > 246c8 a/m/ctime 1039040869.000000 1039039592.000000 1039039592.000000 (DF) > (ttl 64, id 0, len 156) > 17:32:19.616315 seblade2.159750 > dayton.nfs: 112 lookup fh Unknown/1 > "console" (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 140) > 17:32:19.616353 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159750: reply ok 128 lookup fh > Unknown/1 CHR 20600 ids 504/0 sz 0 nlink 1 rdev 501 fsid 306 nodeid 247e4 > a/m/ctime 1015747714.000000 1027439792.000000 1039029441.000000 (DF) (ttl > 64, id 0, len 156) > 17:32:19.628334 seblade2.159751 > dayton.nfs: 108 lookup fh Unknown/1 "bin" > (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 136) > 17:32:19.628400 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159751: reply ok 128 lookup fh > Unknown/1 DIR 40755 ids 0/0 sz 4096 nlink 2 rdev ffffffff fsid 306 nodeid > 1d38b9 a/m/ctime 1039040880.000000 1026358299.000000 1030454764.000000 > (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 156) > 17:32:19.629347 seblade2.159752 > dayton.nfs: 116 lookup fh Unknown/1 > "ash.static" (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 144) > 17:32:19.629382 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159752: reply ok 128 lookup fh > Unknown/1 REG 100755 ids 0/0 sz 522456 nlink 1 rdev ffffffff fsid 306 > nodeid 1d38f8 a/m/ctime 1039040880.000000 1015669398.000000 > 1030454763.000000 (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 156) > 17:32:19.640029 seblade2.159753 > dayton.nfs: 112 read fh Unknown/1 4096 > bytes @ 0 (DF) (ttl 64, id 0, len 140) > 17:32:19.640181 dayton > seblade2: (frag 51580:1244 at 2960) (ttl 64, len > 1264) 17:32:19.640192 dayton > seblade2: (frag 51580:1480 at 1480+) (ttl 64, > len 1500) 17:32:19.640201 dayton.nfs > seblade2.159753: reply ok 1472 read > REG 100755 ids 0/0 sz 522456 nlink 1 rdev ffffffff fsid 306 nodeid 1d38f8 > a/m/ctime 1039041139.000000 1015669398.000000 1030454763.000000 (frag > 51580:1480 at 0+) (ttl 64, len 1500) >
- From your output it seems that your system cannot find a /bin, /dev, and other things on that nfs mountpoint. But the nfs seems to be up and responding with read errors ... Are you sure you did not overlooked a path? Because the /home (as I saw from a previous email ...) is very strange place to hold a filesystem root ... Dan. ** Sent via the linuxppc-embedded mail list. See http://lists.linuxppc.org/