Lustre Client on Linux Kernel 4+












0















Does anyone know if it is possible to install lustre client software on a linux machine that has kernel 4+? From what I have experimented so far, all the working examples are on kernel 3.10. And if I try to install kmod-luster-client on 4+ machine, it fails with:




rpm -ivh kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64.rpm



error: Failed dependencies:

kernel < 3.10.0-863 is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64

kernel(PDE_DATA) = 0x44f0d59d is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64











share|improve this question























  • I am able to make it work on AWS using ALinux 2 which has lustre kernel module installed by default

    – Alex
    Nov 21 '18 at 21:22


















0















Does anyone know if it is possible to install lustre client software on a linux machine that has kernel 4+? From what I have experimented so far, all the working examples are on kernel 3.10. And if I try to install kmod-luster-client on 4+ machine, it fails with:




rpm -ivh kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64.rpm



error: Failed dependencies:

kernel < 3.10.0-863 is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64

kernel(PDE_DATA) = 0x44f0d59d is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64











share|improve this question























  • I am able to make it work on AWS using ALinux 2 which has lustre kernel module installed by default

    – Alex
    Nov 21 '18 at 21:22
















0












0








0








Does anyone know if it is possible to install lustre client software on a linux machine that has kernel 4+? From what I have experimented so far, all the working examples are on kernel 3.10. And if I try to install kmod-luster-client on 4+ machine, it fails with:




rpm -ivh kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64.rpm



error: Failed dependencies:

kernel < 3.10.0-863 is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64

kernel(PDE_DATA) = 0x44f0d59d is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64











share|improve this question














Does anyone know if it is possible to install lustre client software on a linux machine that has kernel 4+? From what I have experimented so far, all the working examples are on kernel 3.10. And if I try to install kmod-luster-client on 4+ machine, it fails with:




rpm -ivh kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64.rpm



error: Failed dependencies:

kernel < 3.10.0-863 is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64

kernel(PDE_DATA) = 0x44f0d59d is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64








lustre






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asked Nov 20 '18 at 19:55









AlexAlex

11712




11712













  • I am able to make it work on AWS using ALinux 2 which has lustre kernel module installed by default

    – Alex
    Nov 21 '18 at 21:22





















  • I am able to make it work on AWS using ALinux 2 which has lustre kernel module installed by default

    – Alex
    Nov 21 '18 at 21:22



















I am able to make it work on AWS using ALinux 2 which has lustre kernel module installed by default

– Alex
Nov 21 '18 at 21:22







I am able to make it work on AWS using ALinux 2 which has lustre kernel module installed by default

– Alex
Nov 21 '18 at 21:22














1 Answer
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According to lustre/ChangeLog in the b2_10 branch, it works with kernels at least 4.4.133-94.33 (SLES12SP3) and 4.4.0-131 (Ubuntu 16.04).



If you are using a newer kernel, you also need to use a newer version of Lustre. The lustre/ChangeLog on the tip of master (almost 2.12 release) reports support for kernels 4.15.0-32 (Ubuntu 18.04).



It looks like you are trying to install a binary kernel module RPM built for the RHEL7 kernel on a non-RHEL kernel. That is never going to work. You need to either get the right RPMs/Debs for your kernel from https://lustre.org/download/ or download the source and rebuild it for your kernel.



The 2.10.x kernels are currently the LTS maintained releases (bugfixes backported to that release), while 2.11.0 is a feature release that does not have bugfixes backported.






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    1














    According to lustre/ChangeLog in the b2_10 branch, it works with kernels at least 4.4.133-94.33 (SLES12SP3) and 4.4.0-131 (Ubuntu 16.04).



    If you are using a newer kernel, you also need to use a newer version of Lustre. The lustre/ChangeLog on the tip of master (almost 2.12 release) reports support for kernels 4.15.0-32 (Ubuntu 18.04).



    It looks like you are trying to install a binary kernel module RPM built for the RHEL7 kernel on a non-RHEL kernel. That is never going to work. You need to either get the right RPMs/Debs for your kernel from https://lustre.org/download/ or download the source and rebuild it for your kernel.



    The 2.10.x kernels are currently the LTS maintained releases (bugfixes backported to that release), while 2.11.0 is a feature release that does not have bugfixes backported.






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      According to lustre/ChangeLog in the b2_10 branch, it works with kernels at least 4.4.133-94.33 (SLES12SP3) and 4.4.0-131 (Ubuntu 16.04).



      If you are using a newer kernel, you also need to use a newer version of Lustre. The lustre/ChangeLog on the tip of master (almost 2.12 release) reports support for kernels 4.15.0-32 (Ubuntu 18.04).



      It looks like you are trying to install a binary kernel module RPM built for the RHEL7 kernel on a non-RHEL kernel. That is never going to work. You need to either get the right RPMs/Debs for your kernel from https://lustre.org/download/ or download the source and rebuild it for your kernel.



      The 2.10.x kernels are currently the LTS maintained releases (bugfixes backported to that release), while 2.11.0 is a feature release that does not have bugfixes backported.






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        According to lustre/ChangeLog in the b2_10 branch, it works with kernels at least 4.4.133-94.33 (SLES12SP3) and 4.4.0-131 (Ubuntu 16.04).



        If you are using a newer kernel, you also need to use a newer version of Lustre. The lustre/ChangeLog on the tip of master (almost 2.12 release) reports support for kernels 4.15.0-32 (Ubuntu 18.04).



        It looks like you are trying to install a binary kernel module RPM built for the RHEL7 kernel on a non-RHEL kernel. That is never going to work. You need to either get the right RPMs/Debs for your kernel from https://lustre.org/download/ or download the source and rebuild it for your kernel.



        The 2.10.x kernels are currently the LTS maintained releases (bugfixes backported to that release), while 2.11.0 is a feature release that does not have bugfixes backported.






        share|improve this answer













        According to lustre/ChangeLog in the b2_10 branch, it works with kernels at least 4.4.133-94.33 (SLES12SP3) and 4.4.0-131 (Ubuntu 16.04).



        If you are using a newer kernel, you also need to use a newer version of Lustre. The lustre/ChangeLog on the tip of master (almost 2.12 release) reports support for kernels 4.15.0-32 (Ubuntu 18.04).



        It looks like you are trying to install a binary kernel module RPM built for the RHEL7 kernel on a non-RHEL kernel. That is never going to work. You need to either get the right RPMs/Debs for your kernel from https://lustre.org/download/ or download the source and rebuild it for your kernel.



        The 2.10.x kernels are currently the LTS maintained releases (bugfixes backported to that release), while 2.11.0 is a feature release that does not have bugfixes backported.







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        answered Dec 1 '18 at 6:34









        LustreOneLustreOne

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