Unfortunately no one can be told what fun_plug is - you have to see it for yourself.
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I wrote a little backup script that runs daily as a cronjob. It automounts the device, copies some files, and then unmounts the device. It was working great with 1.04 but with the upgrade to 1.05 it fails. Here's the script
#!/bin/sh DEST=/raidauto/Important MOUNT=/raidauto mount $MOUNT || { echo "Cannot mount $MOUNT"; exit 1; } if [ ! -d $DEST ]; then echo "Cannot find $DEST for backup" umount $MOUNT exit 1 fi cp ~/docs/finances/money $DEST/ umount $MOUNT
Here's the entry in my fstab:
//dns-323/Volume_1 /raidauto cifs rw,noauto,user,username=default,pass=media 0 0
The error I get is: cp: cannot create regular file `/raidauto/Important/money': No such file or directory
The funny thing is, if I modify the script to delete /raidauto/Important/money and then perform the cp, it works just fine. So I can apparently create new files, but can't overwrite them. I am baffled. I even wrote a little test program and it fails in the same way as cp does
#include <fcntl.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <errno.h> int main() { int fd = open("/raidauto/Important/money", O_CREAT|O_WRONLY|O_TRUNC); if (fd < 0) fprintf(stderr,"Error = %i\n",errno); else close(fd); return 0; }
Any suggestions????
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Still having this same issue, any ideas?
-rwxrwx--- 1 502 media 416419 Dec 18 20:00 /raidauto/Important/money
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Updated sample code
#include <stdio.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <errno.h> const char *path = "/raidauto/Important/money"; int main(int argc,char **argv) { int fd = open(path,O_RDONLY); if (fd >= 0) { printf("Opened file\n"); close(fd); } else { printf("Failed to open file %d\n",errno); } fd = open(path,O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC); if (fd >= 0) { printf("Opened file\n"); close(fd); } else { printf("Failed to open file %d\n",errno); } return 0; }
Output is
Opened file Failed to open file 2
Error code 2 is no such file or directory, which is obviously wrong because I just opened it for reading immediately before that!
CIFS reports in dmesg
fs/cifs/transport.c: For smb_command 50 fs/cifs/transport.c: Sending smb of length 152 fs/cifs/connect.c: rfc1002 length 0x27 fs/cifs/connect.c: invalid transact2 word count Status code returned 0xc0000034 NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_NOT_FOUND fs/cifs/netmisc.c: Mapping smb error code 2 to POSIX err -2 fs/cifs/cifssmb.c: SetPathInfo (file size) returned -2 fs/cifs/inode.c: SetEOF by path (setattrs) rc = -2 fs/cifs/inode.c: CIFS VFS: leaving cifs_setattr_unix (xid = 105171) rc = -2
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Yea. I get the same thing. I'm rarely in linux these days so I never bothered to troubleshoot it. I correlated it with a samba upgrade on the workstation but I could be wrong. I believe 3.2.4 worked fine but when I upgraded to 3.2.6 I started seeing this behavior.
Seems like a uid/gid issue. Most of the data on my NAS is admin:500. Play around with chown on the NAS or create an identical user/group on linux to do the transfer. Should be able to pinpoint it fairly quickly by doing that I think.
Just a guess anyway.
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Solution found at http://www.zeitoun.net/articles/dsn323- … bug/start.
The easiest route is to upgrade to 2.6.28, and use nodfs as a mount option.
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