Ah. I had forgotten about that. That's me playing around with a few scripts and tcpdump/tcprewrite/tcpreplay in attempt to simulate a very specific environment.

It was started by cron. Are there any specific drivers I should be using on the SG-2440 if I want to do stuff like that?

On 09/02/17 01:53, Jim Thompson wrote:
Why are you attempting to run netmap over standard, unmodified device drivers?

(Perhaps Suricata IPS?)



On Wed, Feb 8, 2017 at 11:47 AM, Øyvind 'bolt' Hvidsten <b...@dhampir.no> wrote:
So, I rebooted an SG-2440 at a remote site, and it didn't come back up.

I went over there, plugged in the console cable, pressed <ENTER> and got a #

Stupidly, instead of poking around, I typed "exit", and it immediately
booted, complaining about some fsck fixes it had to do.

Then it gave me a ton of lines like these:
-----------------------------------------------------------------
281.465158 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.476184 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.483175 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.490567 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.497547 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.504807 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.512232 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
done.
281.519241 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.526864 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.534269 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.541352 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.548217 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.555776 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.562758 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.569795 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.577263 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.584263 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.595263 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.603180 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.610788 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
Starting NTP tim281.618288 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx
1024 rx 1024
e client...281.627131 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq
0
281.635177 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.642505 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.650094 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.657131 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.664235 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.671654 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.678689 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
281.685705 [ 266] generic_find_num_desc     called, in tx 1024 rx 1024
281.693152 [ 274] generic_find_num_queues   called, in txq 0 rxq 0
281.702990 [ 799] generic_netmap_dtor       Restored native NA 0
done.
Starting DHCP service...done.
Configuring firewall.....0 addresses deleted.
0 addresses deleted.
.done.
Generating RRD graphs...done.
Starting syslog...done.
[boot process continues.....]
-----------------------------------------------------------------

Well, the box is up now, but what the hey?
Is it normal for these to get stuck at fsck and require manual intervention?
What do all the generic_ lines mean?
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