Summary: I only received one reply from Bryan Moore - who suggested checking the network speeds for compatibility between the 2 systems. These were fine. I needed up removing the mount from /etc/vfstab, rebooting, deleting the cache, recreating the cache and remounting - after which everything was fine once again. I was unable to force an unmount to do the cache delete, thus the required reboot. Reason for the hang is still unknown as there were no error messages to be found in any of the system logs. Ron D. Original (2) posts: -----Original Message----- Before I get any replies - I hope - my original message was incorrect on the cache client setup. Here's the correct setup: mkdir /export/cache0 cfsadmin -c /export/cache0 mkdir /export/mount-point mount -F cachefs -o backfstype=nfs,cachedir=/export/cache0,cacheid=data_cache master:/filesystem /export/mount-point Ron D -----Original Message----- Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2002 11:38 AM To: 'sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org' Subject: CacheFS hung up All, I have set up CacheFS on several of our remote systems and am having problems with one of them that I can't shake loose. On the master server, I have shared the file system as follows: share -F nfs -o ro=<client server> /filesystem on the client server, I set up the cached file system as follows: mkdir /export/cache0 cfsadmin -c /cache/cache0 mkdir /export/mount-point mount -F cachefs -o backfstype=nfs,cachedir=/cache/cache0,cacheid=data_cache master:/filesystem /export/mount-point When I first set this up, it worked fine, and even now everything looks ok when I do the "share" command on the master and the "mount" on the client, however: - when I attempt to access the client directory, nothing happens and it locks the window - I can't ^c out of the "cd /export/mount-point" - fuser -cu /export/mount-point (just sits there) - umount /export/mount-point (hangs) - umount -f /export/mount-point (hangs) I've stopped and started nfs.server on the master, nfs.client on the client, unshared the filesystem on the master and re-shared it. The problem appears to be on the client side, but I can't delete the cache until I can unmount it. I can also mount the shared file system from the master to another mount point and view the files. Anyone have any ideas on how I might shake this puppy loose so I can unmount it, delete it, and re-create it without having to reboot? (it's also set up in the /etc/vfstab to mount at boot, so I know I will need to remove it if I end up rebooting). Any thoughts, ideas, or solutions are welcome. Thanks, Ron D. Ron D. _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu Aug 22 12:31:45 2002
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