Bug#537098: openafs-client: chdir() returns invalid working directory in chroot environment

2009-07-23 Thread Christian Ambach
Hi Russ, I have fixed our root.cell so we can back to the original problem report. Sorry for the noise. Let me try to describe it in another way: we chroot() FTP users into our root.cell. Under that, several volumes are mounted. For one particular volume, FTP access in the chroot does not

Bug#537098: openafs-client: chdir() returns invalid working directory in chroot environment

2009-07-17 Thread Russ Allbery
Christian Ambach b...@bashburg.de writes: I tried to salvage the volumes www and root.cell yesterday evening and the salvager found some wrong vnodes. e.g. 07/14/2009 23:41:18 Vnode 133016: version inode version; fixed (old status) This is a normal message from salvage and usually doesn't

Bug#537098: openafs-client: chdir() returns invalid working directory in chroot environment

2009-07-15 Thread Christian Ambach
Hi Russ, I tried to salvage the volumes www and root.cell yesterday evening and the salvager found some wrong vnodes. e.g. 07/14/2009 23:41:18 Vnode 133016: version inode version; fixed (old status) Right after that, it worked as expected again but this morning it failed again but with a

Bug#537098: openafs-client: chdir() returns invalid working directory in chroot environment

2009-07-14 Thread Christian Ambach
Package: openafs-client Version: 1.4.7.dfsg1-6+lenny1 Severity: normal We have a setup for FTP users that can connect and are chroot()ed into a directory on AFS. There seems to be something wrong with one volume because if you want to chdir into a mountpoint of that volume, the user ends up

Bug#537098: openafs-client: chdir() returns invalid working directory in chroot environment

2009-07-14 Thread Russ Allbery
Christian Ambach b...@bashburg.de writes: We have a setup for FTP users that can connect and are chroot()ed into a directory on AFS. There seems to be something wrong with one volume because if you want to chdir into a mountpoint of that volume, the user ends up outside of the chroot. The