Hi Aki
Thanks for your reply.
I am not sure how I would debug that and figure out what a solution would be, as far as I know the /etc/fstab entry is suppose to
eliminate any race conditions by waiting for
1) The network to come up
2) ISCSI login to happen
so the drive can be mounted.
During boot my client logs into the ISCSI target, but it just does not mount the drive.
I found someone having the exact same problem here as myself
https://github.com/open-iscsi/open-iscsi/issues/299
His solution was on his ISCSI target server, but the symptoms are the same and funny enough it also worked fine for him the first time and than it
started to fail afterwards.
It also worked as expected for me in the beginning, but than i changed IP address on my ISCSI target server,
and than ISCSI started giving me this problem after i added the new target, which was the same disk but under a new IP.
This seems like a unnecessary problem, and something to be desired from the implementation.
The Debian ISCSI guide that i followed (link in the beginning) also contains commands that are no longer available in Debian.
Thanks for your reply.
I am not sure how I would debug that and figure out what a solution would be, as far as I know the /etc/fstab entry is suppose to
eliminate any race conditions by waiting for
1) The network to come up
2) ISCSI login to happen
so the drive can be mounted.
During boot my client logs into the ISCSI target, but it just does not mount the drive.
I found someone having the exact same problem here as myself
https://github.com/open-iscsi/open-iscsi/issues/299
His solution was on his ISCSI target server, but the symptoms are the same and funny enough it also worked fine for him the first time and than it
started to fail afterwards.
It also worked as expected for me in the beginning, but than i changed IP address on my ISCSI target server,
and than ISCSI started giving me this problem after i added the new target, which was the same disk but under a new IP.
This seems like a unnecessary problem, and something to be desired from the implementation.
The Debian ISCSI guide that i followed (link in the beginning) also contains commands that are no longer available in Debian.
Statistics: Posted by drenriza — 2024-12-12 21:26