It is very easy to reproduce, but it has nothing to do
with reiserfs. I have the following scsi partitions:
/dev/sda5 / ext3 defaults 1 1
/dev/sda1 /boot ext2 defaults 1 2
/dev/sda9 /usr ext3 defaults 1 2
/dev/sda7 /var xfs defaults 1 2
/dev/sda11 /home xfs defaults 1 2

I got the following lines on the screen:
Loading ext3.o module
Mounting /proc filesystem
Creating root device
Mounting root filesystem
mount: error 6 mounting ext3 flags defaults

Then my bios started the alarm indicating an
overheating of the CPU (Athlon), and I had to
turn off the power.
mount tried some other flags with the same result:
error 6.

I did not try 22mdk. It was on the mirror for a
very short time. I had the same problem with a
Pentium III and IDE partitions.

Bjarne

Linux tycho.astronomy.dk 2.4.22-21mdkenterprise #1 SMP


On Sat, 2003-11-01 at 08:45, Quel Qun wrote:
> On Fri, 2003-10-31 at 22:25, Gwenole Beauchesne wrote:
> > Hi,
> > 
> > > reiserfs seems to be borked.
> > 
> > In case -22mdk worked. Could you boot into -22mdk and fdisk -l /dev/hda 
> > or whatever holds your reiserfs partitions? And, a dd if=/dev/hda 
> > of=my_disk count=2 could help too.
> > 
> > A little more information about the kernel panic would be helpful too 
> > as we can't telepathicly read what you got and where. ;-)
> > 
> Sorry, I was at work and in a hurry to go home ;)
> It happens on my home machine too, so I guess everyone can reproduce it.
> 
> Here are the messages:
> 
> Loading reiserfs.o module
> reiserfs journal head cache initialized
> Mounting /proc
> Mounting root file system with flags notail
> hdb5 bad access: block=16, count=2
> end_request: I/O error, dev 03:45 (hdb) sector 16
> Then some reiserfs errors and a kernel panic since it can't find the
> init.
> 
> I never saw -22mdk, but here's what I get with -21mdk:
> 
> # fdisk -l /dev/hdb
>  
> Disk /dev/hdb: 30.7 GB, 30735581184 bytes
> 64 heads, 63 sectors/track, 14888 cylinders
> Units = cylinders of 4032 * 512 = 2064384 bytes
>  
>    Device Boot    Start       End    Blocks   Id  System
> /dev/hdb1             1       203    409216+  82  Linux swap
> /dev/hdb2           204     14889  29605968    5  Extended
> /dev/hdb5           204     12401  24591136+  83  Linux
> /dev/hdb6         12402     14889   5014768+  83  Linux
> 
> You will find my_disk obtained with 'dd < /dev/hdb > my_disk count=2'
> attached.
> 
> Let me know if you need anything else.
-- 
Bjarne Thomsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Institute of Physics & Astronomy


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