(top posting, thank you outlook)
The NFS is the backbone of how our CI works. I've been drawing a describing 
picture of how our infra is set up so that everyone can understand the bits and 
pieces of it, but I've seen so super busy lately that it hasn't progressed 
lately. Began working on it during the slower period at Christmas.

Basically we have 20 hosts that need access to the same data. For this we have 
a Dell Compellent storage system in the background and OpenNebula having the 
qcow2 images stored there. Now these qcow2 images are shared over NFS and we 
have 20 hosts reading that data. If they constantly read that data over the 
local network, the NFS server would not cope with it. So that's why all hosts 
have NFS caches so that the data they need is mostly available every time it's 
needed.

It would be a dramatic change in the infra setup if we distributed all these 
qcow2 images to the hosts beforehand, and we don't have the storage space on 
the hosts to store the images either ☹

-Tony
-----Original Message-----
From: Allan Jensen 
Sent: lauantai 17. maaliskuuta 2018 11.25
To: Tony Sarajärvi <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: The CI is down atm

On Samstag, 17. März 2018 07:42:30 CET Tony Sarajärvi wrote:
> Ok I brought it up again. Hosts seem to be dying left and right. The 
> current MAAS provided Ubuntu 16.04 LTS seem to have at least 3 
> different symptoms of how it crashes.
> 
>  
> 
> kernel BUG at /build/linux-Fk60NP/linux-4.10.0/include/linux/swapops.h:129!
> 
> kernel BUG at /build/linux-Fk60NP/linux-4.10.0/fs/fscache/operation.c:494!
> 
> or
> 
> kernel BUG at /build/linux-Fk60NP/linux-4.10.0/fs/fscache/operation.c:68!
> 
>  
> 
> + possible memory corruptions on multiple host causing crashes. These 
> + are
> being checked by memtest, but it hasn’t found anything wrong.
> 
Googling around a bit, these errors seems to be pretty common and happen across 
many different distros and for years. The general conclusion seems to be that 
fscache is just not very stable.

Can't you somehow avoid NFS instead?

'Allan


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