I also have an Oops!ed dmesg. I do not believe this is to do with the sshfs package, for the following reason.
A few nights ago (10th June 2008, I believe) I followed the instructions here: http://www.pendrivelinux.com/2008/05/15/usb-ubuntu-804-persistent- install-from-linux/ I followed the instructions to the letter *except* that I opted for ext3 instead of ext2. (I don't see that making a difference. Or could I be mistaken?) The USB stick is a 4GB SanDisk Cruzer Crossfire. After installing I booted into the standard "ubuntu" user and started a system upgrade. The upgrade hung the whole system while "preparing to unpack sudo", leaving only the magic SysRq method to safely restart the system. I booted into single user mode and started poking around. The command "dpkg --install --force-all /var/cache/apt/archives/sudo_1.6.9p10-1ubuntu3_i386.deb" produces the attached debug report, accessed by the command "dmesg | grep 450". The segfault occurs on several machines with good, memtest86-passed RAM in them. They are all multicore systems. (The upshot of all this is that now I have no sudo command on this system. It's actually not too much of a problem, because I can always reboot into single user mode if I need to do any root stuff.) Still, be nice to fix this. Is there a way? ** Attachment added: "Oops! in single user mode" http://launchpadlibrarian.net/15255995/dpkg.err -- kernel BUG at /build/buildd/linux-2.6.24/fs/attr.c:138! https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/182765 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
