FS#22598 - [kernel26] Crash: "kernel BUG at fs/buffer.c:3229!"
Attached to Project:
Arch Linux
Opened by jackoneill (jackoneill) - Tuesday, 25 January 2011, 13:58 GMT
Last edited by Andrea Scarpino (BaSh) - Saturday, 16 April 2011, 11:02 GMT
Opened by jackoneill (jackoneill) - Tuesday, 25 January 2011, 13:58 GMT
Last edited by Andrea Scarpino (BaSh) - Saturday, 16 April 2011, 11:02 GMT
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Details
Description:
I ran "optipng /home/blah/screenshots/foo/*.png" in one tmux window and "optipng /home/blah/screenshots/bar/*.png" in another tmux window. foo and bar each contain ~10-20 frames extracted with mplayer. Apparently one of them finished and the other optipng process was halfway done when xorg disappeared and the nice trace [1] appeared on a tty. The filesystem mounted at /home is ext4 - this is the relevant line from fstab: LABEL=home /home ext4 defaults,noatime,nodiratime 0 1 Since the last normal boot about a week ago, I had hibernated twice (uswsusp, swap partition), if that matters at all. Additional info: $ uname -a Linux home 2.6.37-ARCH #1 SMP PREEMPT Fri Jan 7 17:32:33 CET 2011 x86_64 Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU T5470 @ 1.60GHz GenuineIntel GNU/Linux $ pacman -Q kernel26 kernel26 2.6.37-1 (using [testing], last -Syu was yesterday) (I see there is kernel26 2.6.37-2 now, but the commit message [2] doesn't seem relevant to this problem) $ pacman -Q optipng optipng 0.6.4-1 [1] http://paste.pocoo.org/show/326594/ - extracted from kernel.log, lines 138-181 [2] http://projects.archlinux.org/svntogit/packages.git/commit/kernel26/trunk?id=55b5888f94c9bb056e730f3c70484904bee8b0c0 [3] http://paste.pocoo.org/show/326590/ - full kernel.log (also attached to this task) |
This task depends upon
Closed by Andrea Scarpino (BaSh)
Saturday, 16 April 2011, 11:02 GMT
Reason for closing: None
Additional comments about closing: seems solved
Saturday, 16 April 2011, 11:02 GMT
Reason for closing: None
Additional comments about closing: seems solved
ext4-optipng-fail.log
home: clearing orphan inode 261375 (uid=1000, gid=1000, mode=0100644, size=1234088)
home: clean, blah/blah files, blahblah/blahblah blocks
Does that mean an fsck was performed?
Pass 1: Checking inodes, blocks, and sizes
Pass 2: Checking directory structure
Pass 3: Checking directory connectivity
Pass 4: Checking reference counts
Pass 5: Checking group summary information
home: 27374/6368608 files (3.8% non-contiguous), 20839030/25612138 blocks
That's good, right?