On Wed, 9 Dec 2009, Christopher Hawkins wrote: > After some time I revisited this issue on a freshly installed Centos 5.4 box, > latest kernel (2.6.18-164.6.1.el5 ) and the panic is still reproducible. Any > time I create a snapshot of the root filesystem, kernel panics. The LVM HOWTO > says to post bug reports to this list. Is this the proper place? Bummer. I would post the bug on Centos bugzilla also. Please post the bug number here if you do it (cause I'll get to it eventually). Thanks for testing this. I have the same problem, and have a new client to install by next year - so not much time to work on it. Now that we know it is not yet fixed, we can form theories as to what is going wrong. My guess is that the problem is caused by the fact that lvm is updating files in /etc/lvm on the root filesystem while taking the snapshot. These updates are done by user space programs, so I would further speculate that *any* snapshot would crash if an update happened exactly when creating the snapshot - i.e. the atomic nature of snapshot creation has been broken. The lvm user space probably does fsync() on files in /etc/lvm, which might be involved in triggering the crash. We could test the first theory by moving /etc/lvm to another volume (I sometimes put it on /boot - a non LVM filesystem - for easier disaster recovery.) Naturally, I wouldn't go moving /etc/lvm on a production server. Testing the second hypothesis is less certain, and would basically involve trying snapshots of LVs undergoing heavy updating. -- Stuart D. Gathman <stuart@bmsi.com> Business Management Systems Inc. Phone: 703 591-0911 Fax: 703 591-6154 "Confutatis maledictis, flammis acribus addictis" - background song for a Microsoft sponsored "Where do you want to go from here?" commercial. _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/