Kenneth Ölwing <kenneth@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On 2013-04-05 15:42, Thomas Rast wrote: >> Can you run the same tests under strace or similar, and gather the >> relevant outputs? Otherwise it's probably very hard to say what is >> going wrong. In particular we've had some reports on lustre that >> boiled down to "impossible" returns from libc functions, not git >> issues. It's hard to say without some evidence. > Thomas, thanks for your reply. > > I'm assuming I should strace the git commands as they're issued? I'm > already collecting regular stdout/err output in a log as I go. Is > there any debugging things I can turn on to make the calls issue > internal tracing of some sort? I don't think there's any internal debugging that helps at this point. Usually errors pointing to corruption are caused by a chain of syscalls failing in some way, and the final error shows only the last one, so strace() output is very interesting. > The main issue I see is that I suspect it will generate so much data > that it'll overflow my disk ;-). Well, assuming you have some automated way of detecting when it fails, you can just overwrite the same strace output file repeatedly; we're only interested in the last one (or all the last ones if several gits fail concurrently). Fiddling with strace will unfortunately change the timings somewhat (causing a bunch of extra context switches per syscall), but I hope that you can still get it to reproduce. -- Thomas Rast trast@{inf,student}.ethz.ch -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html