----- Original Message -----
From: "Ian Downes" <i...@ndwns.net>
Thanks, indeed jls -d does show the jail as in the process of dying. I
watched jls -d and (unscientifically) as soon as jls -d reported the jail was
completely dead I was able to umount and destroy the filesystem.
I hadn't expected it to take a minute or more for a jail to die. Is this usual?
Can anyone suggest what may be causing this? Perhaps a network related timeout?
Yes its very likely a network timeout. You can either track down the app which
is not closing properly or you could try reducing the tcp timeout via the
sysctl:-
net.inet.tcp.msl
Be aware that changing this does technically break the RFC.
Regards
Steve
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