[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1240143] Re: NFS client reports a 'readdir loop' with a corrupt name

2014-01-06 Thread Justin Fletcher
Kernel bug remains. Realised that jsalisbury had said that I should mark it as confirmed, and I hadn't. ** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu) Status: Expired = Confirmed -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to linux in Ubuntu.

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1240143] Re: NFS client reports a 'readdir loop' with a corrupt name

2013-11-06 Thread Justin Fletcher
Tested with kernel 3.12 as advised and we still see the problem. ** Tags added: kernel-bug-exists-upstream -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is subscribed to linux in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1240143 Title: NFS client

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1240143] Re: NFS client reports a 'readdir loop' with a corrupt name

2013-10-16 Thread Justin Fletcher
Missing log files were intentional; these are company systems and I am not allowed by policy to upload arbitrary files without review. Testing to follow, but as the problem is sporadic, I'm not sure that we can say categorically that it is a fixed or not. -- You received this bug notification

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1240143] [NEW] NFS client reports a 'readdir loop' with a corrupt name

2013-10-15 Thread Justin Fletcher
Public bug reported: We have an NFS server running on a RedHat system. One particular directory contains many, many RPMs (96850). It reports that there is a 'readdir loop', and the loop in question contains corrupted names. I assume the name corruption is happening on the Linux kernel end, not

[Kernel-packages] [Bug 1240143] Re: NFS client reports a 'readdir loop' with a corrupt name

2013-10-15 Thread Justin Fletcher
We have an NFS server running on a RedHat system. ... which we access through an Ubuntu 12.04 LTS system. It is on this system that the NFS client problems occur. Sorry, that wasn't especially clear :-( -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel Packages, which is