Bug#453120: mptscsi: Massive workload causes FS to be remounted readonly in VMware guest

2007-11-29 Thread Sebastian Dröge
Am Donnerstag, den 29.11.2007, 09:30 +0100 schrieb Sebastian Dröge: > tags 453120 - moreinfo > thanks > > Am Dienstag, den 27.11.2007, 18:40 +0100 schrieb maximilian attems: > > tags 453120 moreinfo > > severity 453120 normal > > stop > > > > On Tue, Nov 27, 2007 at 03:34:31PM +0100, Sebastian Dr

Bug#453120: mptscsi: Massive workload causes FS to be remounted readonly in VMware guest

2007-11-29 Thread Sebastian Dröge
tags 453120 - moreinfo thanks Am Dienstag, den 27.11.2007, 18:40 +0100 schrieb maximilian attems: > tags 453120 moreinfo > severity 453120 normal > stop > > On Tue, Nov 27, 2007 at 03:34:31PM +0100, Sebastian Dröge wrote: > > Package: linux-2.6 > > Severity: important > > hmm your report is miss

Bug#453120: mptscsi: Massive workload causes FS to be remounted readonly in VMware guest

2007-11-27 Thread dann frazier
On Tue, Nov 27, 2007 at 03:34:31PM +0100, Sebastian Dr??ge wrote: > Package: linux-2.6 > Severity: important > > Hi, > when running a Debian system as VMware guest system one could get SCSI > timeouts when there is massive workload on the host system. Since some > kernel version these will get the

Bug#453120: mptscsi: Massive workload causes FS to be remounted readonly in VMware guest

2007-11-27 Thread maximilian attems
tags 453120 moreinfo severity 453120 normal stop On Tue, Nov 27, 2007 at 03:34:31PM +0100, Sebastian Dröge wrote: > Package: linux-2.6 > Severity: important hmm your report is missing important info, you don't tell us which debian version against it is? -> http://wiki.debian.org/DebianKernelRepor

Bug#453120: mptscsi: Massive workload causes FS to be remounted readonly in VMware guest

2007-11-27 Thread Sebastian Dröge
Package: linux-2.6 Severity: important Hi, when running a Debian system as VMware guest system one could get SCSI timeouts when there is massive workload on the host system. Since some kernel version these will get the filesystems remounted read-only, which probably makes sense for real hardware,