Konrad Rzeszutek wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 06:07:12AM -0400, Konrad Rzeszutek wrote:
>>> It looks like the network is off but the session is still running. We
>>> eventually get to the kernel shutoff here. Is your init script getting
>>> run? If not then run it. If you left the session on
Konrad Rzeszutek schrieb:
>> "Synchronizing SCSI cache for disk" happens because:
>>
>> - iSCSI sessions were not properly disconnected, and
>
> Correct.
>
>> - they can't be properly disconnected any more, because the network is
>> already disabled.
>
> Kind of. There is a kernel timer that g
> "Synchronizing SCSI cache for disk" happens because:
>
> - iSCSI sessions were not properly disconnected, and
Correct.
> - they can't be properly disconnected any more, because the network is
> already disabled.
Kind of. There is a kernel timer that gets activated during the logout sequence
Konrad Rzeszutek schrieb:
> On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 06:07:12AM -0400, Konrad Rzeszutek wrote:
>>> It looks like the network is off but the session is still running. We
>>> eventually get to the kernel shutoff here. Is your init script getting
>>> run? If not then run it. If you left the session
On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 06:07:12AM -0400, Konrad Rzeszutek wrote:
> > It looks like the network is off but the session is still running. We
> > eventually get to the kernel shutoff here. Is your init script getting
> > run? If not then run it. If you left the session on on purpose then you
> >
> It looks like the network is off but the session is still running. We
> eventually get to the kernel shutoff here. Is your init script getting
> run? If not then run it. If you left the session on on purpose then you
> cannot turn the network off because the scsi layer will want to do its
>
Konrad Rzeszutek wrote:
> Firstly, I haven't dug in this yet but this is more of a call:
> "have-you-seen-this-too?"
>
This is probably on the list 20 times :)
> When I reboot the machine without logging off from iSCSI targets I can
> hang the reboot sequence. This is with 869-rc4 userspace, S
Firstly, I haven't dug in this yet but this is more of a call:
"have-you-seen-this-too?"
When I reboot the machine without logging off from iSCSI targets I can
hang the reboot sequence. This is with 869-rc4 userspace, SLES 10 SP2 Beta
kernel, with
a 869-rc4 kernels compiled out of tree. (With a