On Wed, 21.04.10 14:00, John Frankish (j-frankish at slb.com) wrote: Your quoting is still broken. Please fix that. > Well, my educated bet is that the kernel has some deprecated sysfs > switches on. > > It is highly recommended to let your distributor figure things like this > out, as they usually know which switches are needed to make things > properly these day. Use distribution kernels! Use the knowledge and > experience of your kernel maintainers! > > Lennart Poettering Red Hat, Inc. > > So, a plug for red hat then :) No. Just a plug for not reinventing the wheel over and over again and for using the work somebody else already did for you. If you use Fedora or Ubuntu, or Suse, or Mandriva: their kernels don't suffer by these problems. But what I suggested above, is really most likely your problem. You need to disable CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED_V2 and friends in the kernel. Even though you apparently don't take hints from RH people seriously, you should in this case. Lennart -- Lennart Poettering Red Hat, Inc. lennart [at] poettering [dot] net http://0pointer.net/lennart/ GnuPG 0x1A015CC4