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Operating Systems Linux Debian Cannot reboot Debian Etch - 1 Core at 100% Post 302360123 by jelloir on Thursday 8th of October 2009 07:19:14 AM
Old 10-08-2009
Cannot reboot Debian Etch - 1 Core at 100%

I have a weird problem.

I cannot reboot my Debian Etch Server and one core shows as using 100% CPU but nothing appears to be using it????

I have tried kill -9 and killall via htop on the nbd mount and poweroff and shutdown commands but gett nothing.

I also killed a number of other processes but no joy.

Anyone have any ideas? I just want to reboot it..... never had this happen before on Debian.

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XNBD-CLIENT(1)						      General Commands Manual						    XNBD-CLIENT(1)

NAME
xnbd-client -- connect to a server running xnbd-server(8), to use its exported block device SYNOPSIS
xnbd-client [--blocksize SIZE] [--connect] [--exportname NAME] [--recovery-command COMMAND] [--recovery-command-reboot COMMAND] [--retry COUNT] [--timeout SECONDS] NBD-DEVICE [ HOST PORT ...] xnbd-client [bs=SIZE] [timeout=SECONDS] HOST PORT NBD-DEVICE xnbd-client --disconnect NBD-DEVICE xnbd-client --check NBD-DEVICE DESCRIPTION
With xnbd-client, you can connect to a server running xnbd-server or xnbd-wrapper, thus using raw diskspace from that server as a blockde- vice on the local client. To do this, support from the Linux Kernel is necessary, in the form of the Network Block Device (NBD). When you have that, either in the kernel, or as a module, you can connect to an NBD server and use its exported file through a block special file with major mode 43. Long options can also be specified with two leading dashes. Some options are call compatible to nbd-client(1) as are most behavioural switches. This makes xnbd-client a plug-in replacement for nbd-client. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: --blocksize SIZE Use the provided value as block size. Default is 1024; allowed values are either 512, 1024, 2048 or 4096. For best results use a block size value of 4096 For compatibility to nbd-client(1) you can also use bs=SIZE --check|-c Check whether the specified nbd device is connected. If the device is connected, xnbd-client will exit with an exit state of 0 and print the PID of the xnbd-client instance that con- nected it to stdout. If the device is not connected or does not exist (for example because the nbd module was not loaded), xnbd-client will exit with an exit state of 1 and not print anything on stdout. If an error occurred, xnbd-client will exit with an exit state of 2, and not print anything on stdout either. --connect|-C Connect to the nbd-server --disconnect|-d Disconnect the specified nbd device from the server. Terminates execution with an exit state of 0 on success. --exportname NAME If the server supports to access devices by an identifier, use NAME to request access to a particular volume. This command is useful in combination with a xnbd-wrapper and only succeeds, if the remote host is exporting the requested device. --retry COUNT Try up to "COUNT" times to connect to the associated nbd-server. Default is 1, that is nbd-client will stop after the first unsuccessful try. --recovery-command invoke a specified command "COMMAND" on unexpected disconnection --recovery-command-reboot Invoke the reboot(8) command on unexpected disconnection --timeout SECONDS Use a timeout period (default is 0 which means not to use a timeout). Please do not use this option for now, as it seems not to work due to a bug in the kernel module. For compatibility to nbd-client(1) you can also use timeout=SECONDS POSITIONAL ARGUMENTS
The following positional options are supported: HOST The site to connect to a remote xnbd-server. You can specify any resolvable hostname, IPv4 or IPv6 address. PORT The port number to connect to on remote side NBD-DEVICE The local nbd-device to be associated with the remote xnbd-server. You can specify multiple host port tuples. xnbd-client will try to connect to each of them in order until it succeeds to establish a connection to a server. BUGS
The NBD device is known to deadlock when not being used altogether with the deadline scheduler. Make sure to do: echo deadline > /sys/block/nbd0/queue/scheduler SEE ALSO
xnbd-server (8), xnbd-wrapper (8). AUTHOR
The NBD kernel module and the NBD tools have been written by Pavel Macheck (pavel@ucw.cz) and is now maintained by Paul Clements. (Paul.Clements@steeleye.com). The xNBD userland (client and server) have been written by Takahiro Hirofuchi (t.hirofuchi@aist.go.jp) This manual page was written by Arno Toell (debian@toell.net) for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). Large parts are verbatim copies of the original nbd-server and nbd-client manual pages written by Wouter Verhelst (wouter@debian.org). Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation. XNBD-CLIENT(1)
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