On 24. 01. 12 22:41, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 25/01/12 04:50, Sylvain wrote:
On 24. 01. 12 09:28, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 24/01/12 18:50, Sylvain wrote:
I tried to SIGKILL the [nfsiod] process but it didn't get killed. I
also tried to kill the various rpcbind processes but it didn't change
an
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 12:50 PM, Sylvain wrote:
> On 24. 01. 12 09:28, Tom H wrote:
>> On 24/01/12 18:50, Sylvain wrote:
>>>
>>> I tried to SIGKILL the [nfsiod] process but it didn't get killed. I
>>> also tried to kill the various rpcbind processes but it didn't change
>>> anything.
>>>
>>> I al
Sylvain wrote:
> I have an NFS share mounted on my Debian testing computer with default
> mount options. It works fine but as soon as my computer loses network
> access or the NAS is disconnected or shut down, the system becomes
> unstable:
I would recommend a number of things to review.
1. If t
On 25/01/12 04:50, Sylvain wrote:
> On 24. 01. 12 09:28, Scott Ferguson wrote:
>> On 24/01/12 18:50, Sylvain wrote:
>>> I tried to SIGKILL the [nfsiod] process but it didn't get killed. I
>>> also tried to kill the various rpcbind processes but it didn't change
>>> anything.
>>>
>>> I also tried au
On Tue, 2012-01-24 at 18:50 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
> No, nfs didn't quit after avahi failed (the nfsiod process is still
> here). Also I don't know the hostname of 192.168.2.77, because it's just
> a NAS box on which I don't have any control.
Which kernel is installed? Have you tried downgrading
On 24. 01. 12 09:28, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 24/01/12 18:50, Sylvain wrote:
I tried to SIGKILL the [nfsiod] process but it didn't get killed. I
also tried to kill the various rpcbind processes but it didn't change
anything.
I also tried autofs as Scott suggested, but the same problem occured
w
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 2:50 AM, Sylvain wrote:
> 2012/1/23 Frank :
>> On Mon, 2012-01-23 at 11:47 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
>>
>>> I already tried this option too, but it didn't help. Also according to
>>> the manpage:
>>>
>>> > The intr / nointr mount option is deprecated after kernel 2.6.25. Only
On 24/01/12 18:50, Sylvain wrote:
> 2012/1/23 Frank :
>> On Mon, 2012-01-23 at 11:47 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
>>
>>> I already tried this option too, but it didn't help. Also according to
>>> the manpage:
>>>
The intr / nointr mount option is deprecated after kernel 2.6.25. �Only
SIGKILL ca
2012/1/23 Frank :
> On Mon, 2012-01-23 at 11:47 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
>
>> I already tried this option too, but it didn't help. Also according to
>> the manpage:
>>
>> > The intr / nointr mount option is deprecated after kernel 2.6.25. Only
>> > SIGKILL can interrupt a pending NFS operation on th
On Mon, 2012-01-23 at 11:47 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
> I already tried this option too, but it didn't help. Also according to
> the manpage:
>
> > The intr / nointr mount option is deprecated after kernel 2.6.25. Only
> > SIGKILL can interrupt a pending NFS operation on these kernels, and if
>
On 23/01/12 21:15, Sylvain wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an NFS share mounted on my Debian testing computer with default
> mount options. It works fine but as soon as my computer loses network
> access or the NAS�is disconnected or shut down, the system becomes
> unstable:
>
> - In KDE, everything is f
2012/1/23 Frank :
> On Mon, 2012-01-23 at 11:15 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have an NFS share mounted on my Debian testing computer with default
>> mount options. It works fine but as soon as my computer loses network
>> access or the NAS is disconnected or shut down, the system becomes
>>
On Mon, 2012-01-23 at 11:15 +0100, Sylvain wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an NFS share mounted on my Debian testing computer with default
> mount options. It works fine but as soon as my computer loses network
> access or the NAS is disconnected or shut down, the system becomes
> unstable:
>
> - In KDE,
13 matches
Mail list logo