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Re: Kernel Opps/panic with 2.4.19

To: Austin Gonyou <austin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Kernel Opps/panic with 2.4.19
From: Stephen Lord <lord@xxxxxxx>
Date: 03 Sep 2002 15:07:26 -0500
Cc: linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx, Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@xxxxxxx>
In-reply-to: <1031083281.32386.21.camel@UberGeek.coremetrics.com>
References: <1031083281.32386.21.camel@UberGeek.coremetrics.com>
Sender: linux-xfs-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxx
On Tue, 2002-09-03 at 15:01, Austin Gonyou wrote:
> I'm using 2.4.19-rc5-aa1 patch on a standard 2.4.19 kernel with ~1TB of
> disks FC2 disks. (14*69.87GB)
> 
> I'm using LVM 1.0.3 and associated tools, as well as XFS as my FS of
> choice. I'm not sure what's happened recently, but after upgrading my
> disk subsystem to full FC2 (we were just FC2 to the switches before),
> when mounting any of the volumes on the StorageTek D178 subsystem, I get
> the following bug message. 
> 
> I was curious if I was hitting an XFS bug, or if it's because of the
> many LIP resets I get from the Qlogic Driver and the kernel got
> overflowed or XFS's mount got overflowed or something. Not sure, but it
> doesn't sound good. TIA
> 
> scsi1: Topology - (FL_Port), Host Loop address 0x0
> Starting XFS recovery on filesystem: lvm(58,0) (dev: 58/0)
> kernel BUG at page_buf.c:602!
> invalid operand: 0000 2.4.19 #2 SMP Sun Aug 25 23:33:55 CDT 2002
> CPU:    4
> EIP:    0010:[<c01ff6e4>]    Not tainted
> EFLAGS: 00010246
> eax: 00000000   ebx: 00000002   ecx: 00080221   edx: 00000000
> esi: c92d5180   edi: 00000001   ebp: 00000000   esp: c92e5720
> ds: 0018   es: 0018   ss: 0018
> Process mount (pid: 1381, stackpage=c92e5000)
> Stack: c92d51e0 00000002 000001f0 c78eb28c c92e4000 00000000 00000000
> 000001f0
>        00000000 00000001 0010000c 00000002 00000000 00000002 00800050
> 00000000
>        00002205 00000000 c01ffc76 c92d5180 c92e9934 00002205 00002000
> 00002205
> Call Trace:    [<c01ffc76>] [<c01e68c7>] [<c01e7854>] [<c01e5d97>]
> [<c01e792f>]  [<c01e7a3e>] [<c01e8544>] [<c01e89d3>] [<c01e8a3b>]
> [<c01e8c53>] [<c01e13b4>]  [<c01ea0bc>] [<c0201a3c>] [<c01e95b4>]
> [<c01e980b>] [<c01f36be>] [<c01f392f>]  [<c01f3977>] [<c020c753>]
> [<c013ed95>] [<c01352b5>] [<c013d02f>] [<c012f57d>]  [<c013d02f>]
> [<c014dd2a>] [<c014e7ac>] [<c014dc7b>] [<c014eb8c>] [<c01652e8>] 
> [<c0165780>] [<c01655c9>] [<c0165d3f>] [<c01095bb>]
> Code: 0f 0b 5a 02 a0 4e 2f c0 8b 4c 24 4c 8b 51 58 81 49 08 04 00

A decoded version of that would help....

Steve

> 
> -- 
> Austin Gonyou <austin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Coremetrics, Inc.
> 



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