On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 10:26 AM, Jason Holtzapple <
ml@bitflip.net> wrote:
> On 02/25/2011 09:32 AM, Mark Phillips wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 8:28 AM, Jason Holtzapple <ml@bitflip.net
> > <mailto:ml@bitflip.net>> wrote:
> >
> > On 02/25/2011 08:23 AM, Mark Phillips wrote:
> > > I have two disks running in a Debian machine ( Linux version
> > > 2.6.26-1-686 (Debian 2.6.26-13lenny2) (dannf@debian.org
> > <mailto:dannf@debian.org>
> > > <mailto:dannf@debian.org <mailto:dannf@debian.org>>) (gcc version
> > 4.1.3 20080704 (prerelease)
> > > (Debian 4.1.2-25)) #1 SMP Fri Mar 13 18:08:45 UTC 2009). One disk
> has
> > > the OS, the other disk has lots of photos and the program gallery3
> > > (http://gallery.menalto.com/gallery_3_begins) to display them on
> the
> > > web. The disk controller channel for the photo disk died, but the
> os
> > > kept on running. I replaced the controller card, and now both
> > drives are
> > > running. However, I am getting some stale NFS file handles on some
> of
> > > the images on the photo drive. I don't use NFS on this machine, or
> any
> > > machine on my network. However, the pictures with the stale NFS
> file
> > > handles do not display when I run gallery.
> > >
> > > How should I fix this problem? Delete and re-install the offending
> > > pictures? Run fsck on the photos drive? Stop taking so many
> > pictures? ;-)
> > >
> > > Thanks!
> > >
> > > Mark
> > >
> > > These are the errors:
> > >
> > > hammerhead:/home/mark# du -hs /backups
> > > du: cannot access
> `/backups/gallery3/var/resizes/11-01-2010/2010:11:01
> > > 08:11:50 295.JPG': Stale NFS file handle
> >
> > This is strange - you shouldn't be getting these errors unless you
> are
> > an NFS client. Double check your /etc/fstab and /etc/exports files.
> If
> > that doesn't make sense post the output of these two commands to the
> > list:
> >
> > # grep nfs /etc/fstab
> >
> > # egrep -v '^#' /etc/exports
> >
> >
> > hammerhead:/home/mark# grep nfs /etc/fstab
> > hammerhead:/home/mark#
> > hammerhead:/home/mark# egrep -v '^#' /etc/exports
> > /home/mark/vmware 192.168.25.0/255.255.255.0(rw)<http://192.168.25.0/255.255.255.0%28rw%29>
> > <http://192.168.25.0/255.255.255.0(rw)>
> > hammerhead:/home/mark#
> >
> > Hmmm.....I must have experimented with vmware at one time on this
> > computer. No need for it now.
>
> I suppose you might have an NFS share automounted. Does
> # mount | grep nfs
> return anything?
hammerhead:/home/mark# mount | grep nfs
rpc_pipefs on /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs type rpc_pipefs (rw)
hammerhead:/home/mark#
I have no idea who rpc_pipefs on /var/lib.... is and why it is there! Any
ideas before I blow it away?
> If so you could try unmounting the filesystem with
> umount -l
>
>
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