I have a CentOS 7 system where I needed to restart chronyd - but the systemctl 
restart failed with the error:

 systemd[1]: Starting NTP client/server...
 systemd[43578]: Failed at step NAMESPACE spawning /usr/sbin/chronyd: Stale 
file handle
 systemd[1]: chronyd.service: control process exited, code=exited status=226

Turns out there are a couple of Stale NFS file handles from fuse mounts 
(related to gvfsd) of sub directories under an NFS mounted home directory 
server - but the home directory for the user in this case, no longer exist 
(user has left)

However, I have no idea why these 'Stale file handles' prevent a service being 
started by systemd ?

In this case, chronyd has nothing to do with NFS mounted user home directories 
- so shouldn't really care ?

I have tried everything I can think of to clear these stale mounts, but with no 
luck

Does anyone know why systemd complains about unconnected 'Stale file handles' - 
and is there any way I can tell systemctl to start a service regardless of 
these 'errors' ?

Rebooting the host will be a last resort (the system is used by many users) - 
but in the meantime, I've manually started the /usr/sbin/chronyd binary 
directly, which runs fine

Thanks

James Pearson
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

Reply via email to