On Tuesday 11 June 2002 18:28, Simon Matthews wrote:
> Other packets were able to make it into and out of the machine: I could
> telnet/ssh/rlogin. The user could not interrupt the process, despite the
> fact that the mount options included "intr".
There is a well known problem with 'intr': if one process is waiting on the
page lock, then there is no provision for interrupting (that's a known
weakness with the MM layer).
Since taking the page lock is usually done by some process that wants to read
from a page, the usual cause of such a hangup is the fact that some other
process is in the middle of an NFS READ. For this reason, if you kill *all*
READ operations (by doing 'killall -9 rpciod) then you can usually recover.
That's something that is only possible for 'root' though...
> My point is that the use of half-duplex may prevent the NFS client from
> sending or receiving (probably sending) some packets. But, since the
> processes that caused the load had stopped doing anything and other packets
> were passing in and out, the NFS client should have been able to recover
> earlier.
As I said, all the client is required to do is to retry (unless it gets
interrupted). I'm not sure what else you mean by 'recover' in the above
sentence.
Cheers,
Trond
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sat Jun 15 2002 - 22:00:25 EST