Do: cat /proc/PID/stack It is probably stuck in the block layer.
On 11/18/2011 08:33 AM, Nick Khamis wrote: > Hello Everyone, > > I just ran fsck.ocfs2 on /dev/drbd0 which is a one gig partition on a > vm with limited resource (100meg of ram). > I am worried that the process crashed because it has not responded in > the past hour or so? > > fsck.ocfs2 /dev/drbd0 > fsck.ocfs2 1.6.4 > [RECOVER_CLUSTER_INFO] The running cluster is using the cman stack > with the cluster name ASTCluster, but the filesystem is configured for > the classic o2cb stack. Thus, fsck.ocfs2 cannot determine whether the > filesystem is in use. fsck.ocfs2 can reconfigure the filesystem to > use the currently running cluster configuration. DANGER: YOU MUST BE > ABSOLUTELY SURE THAT NO OTHER NODE IS USING THIS FILESYSTEM BEFORE > MODIFYING ITS CLUSTER CONFIGURATION. Recover cluster configuration > information the running cluster?<n> y > > > ps -uroot > 8040 pts/0 00:00:00 fsck.ocfs2 > > > I want to mention that I did issue a ctrl+c and ctrl+x when I paniced. > But I do not think anything happened. > > Nick > > _______________________________________________ > Ocfs2-users mailing list > Ocfs2-users@oss.oracle.com > http://oss.oracle.com/mailman/listinfo/ocfs2-users _______________________________________________ Ocfs2-users mailing list Ocfs2-users@oss.oracle.com http://oss.oracle.com/mailman/listinfo/ocfs2-users