Veritas File System 5.1 SP1 Administrator"s Guide (5900-1499, April 2011)

Table B-1
Kernel messages (continued)
Message and DefinitionMessage Number
WARNING: msgcnt x: mesg 006: V-2-6: vx_sumupd - mount_point file
system summary update in au aun failed
WARNING: msgcnt x: mesg 007: V-2-7: vx_sumupd - mount_point file
system summary update in inode au iaun failed
Description
An I/O error occurred while writing the allocation unit or inode
allocation unit bitmap summary to disk. This sets the
VX_FULLFSCK flag on the file system. If the VX_FULLFSCK flag
cannot be set, the file system is disabled.
Action
Check the console log for I/O errors. If the problem was caused by
a disk failure, replace the disk before the file system is mounted
for write access, and use fsck to run a full structural check.
006, 007
WARNING: msgcnt x: mesg 008: V-2-8: vx_direrr: function -
mount_point file system dir inode dir_inumber dev/block
device_ID/block dirent inode dirent_inumber error errno
WARNING: msgcnt x: mesg 009: V-2-9: vx_direrr: function -
mount_point file system dir inode dir_inumber dirent inode
dirent_inumber immediate directory error errno
Description
A directory operation failed in an unexpected manner. The mount
point, inode, and block number identify the failing directory. If the
inode is an immediate directory, the directory entries are stored
in the inode, so no block number is reported. If the error is ENOENT
or ENOTDIR, an inconsistency was detected in the directory block.
This inconsistency could be a bad free count, a corrupted hash
chain, or any similar directory structure error. If the error is EIO
or ENXIO, an I/O failure occurred while reading or writing the disk
block.
The VX_FULLFSCK flag is set in the super-block so that fsck will
do a full structural check the next time it is run.
Action
Check the console log for I/O errors. If the problem was caused by
a disk failure, replace the disk before the file system is mounted
for write access. Unmount the file system and use fsck to run a
full structural check.
008, 009
149Diagnostic messages
Kernel messages