On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 11:10 AM, Mircea Ciocan <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Derrick Brashear wrote: >> >> On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 11:06 AM, Mircea Ciocan >> <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> >>> Derrick Brashear wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM, Ted Creedon <[email protected]> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>> >>>>> OpenAFS crashed my 8 processor Intel i7 using 16% of one cpu and 100% >>>>> of >>>>> a >>>>> single processor system too. >>>>> >>>>> The problem is time consuming due to the cold boots and the reset >>>>> button... >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> Are you running 1.4.10? (The correct answer is yes. If you give the >>>> wrong answer, fix it and try again) >>>> >>>> >>> >>> Yes, I'm running this on an OpenSUSE 11.1 x64: >>> openafs-authlibs-1.4.10-13.2 >>> openafs-1.4.10-13.2 >>> openafs-client-1.4.10-13.2 >>> openafs-server-1.4.10-13.2 >>> openafs-kmp-default-1.4.10_2.6.27.21_0.1-13.2 >>> openafs-krb5-mit-1.4.10-13.2 >>> >>> IMHO, no matter what kerberos key >>> >> >> The kerberos key isn't causing the problem. >> >> >>> >>> b..s is happening this should not produce >>> this miserable kernel loop that kills the most powerful machines >>> available >>> today, it either should have some slower cadence so that eventually some >>> could stop the AFS processes or it should give up after some time, I this >>> regard I consider this behavior a bug. >>> >> >> it probably is. >> >> dumb question: are you using dynroot? >> > > Actually yes, I do, and it works like a charm, is that bad now ?!?!?!?
sure. it means you're starting afs with no servers available to serve root.afs. it's a bug. there's a ticket open for it. but it's easily avoidable: don't do that. _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info
