Derrick Brashear wrote:
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.
Oh well, fashion changes, some while ago NOT USING dynroot was bad and
obsolete, now is vice-versa ;), good to know that this was what was
causing it
but then again dynroot is quite convenient, I hope the bug gets fixed
sometime.
Thank you Derrick for your quick and informed answers, you're a life
savior for us not so gurus in the matter :).
Best regards,
Mircea
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