On Fri, Mar 13, 2015 at 09:16:35AM +0100, Petter Reinholdtsen wrote: > [Wolfgang Schweer] > >> Any idea what could cause this failure? > > On the server it can be caused by manual partitioning without a > separate partition for /skole/tjener/home0.
Good point. I haven't even thought about this case for a main server. > On a client, it is most likely caused by missing netgroup membership > causing NFS mount from the server to fail. Looking at the code I thought this part of testsuite/filesystems to be executed only on the main server? > > Seems to be that I'm now able to reproduce: > > 'error: ./filesystems: No lost+found in /skole/tjener/home0/. Blocked > > by autofs?' > > > > If autofs is running due to misconfiguration the message isn't shown. > > That is strange. I would expect misconfigured autofs to trigger the > message, not hide it. Might have been not clear enough: By default, autofs doesn't run on the main server, with 's/exit 0/#exit 0/' /etc/default/autofs' it does; that's what I did to be able to check this issue. With autofs running the home dir partition is NFS mounted and the error doesn't show up. > > So maybe it should be checked if for some reason /etc/fstab is missing > > the entry > > > > /dev/mapper/vg_system-skole+tjener+home0 /skole/tjener/home0 ext4 nosuid 0 2 > > > > or if 'vg_system-skole+tjener+home0' is missing (using 'lvmdiskscan'). > > Both would be good to look for on the main server. But they might give > false alarm with manual partitioning. Maybe a hint could be shown that manual partitioning could be the reason. Wolfgang
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