I have been able to reproduce this bug using bonnie++. The process I used was to install Oneiric using the netboot installer to an external USB SATA drive and boot with that as my root filesystem (SD only has bootloaders & kernel).
Steps to reproduce on a running system:
On panda (no ping):
sudo apt-get install bonnie++
bonnie++ -n 0 -m "USB HD" -q 1>>bonnie.csv
After this runs, on a different system on the same network, start "sudo ping -i 0.001 panda" (assuming the panda is in the host lookup), then on the panda run:
bonnie++ -n 0 -m "USB HD with ping" -q 1>>bonnie.csv
This will produce the results attached (bonnie.csv). Bonnie.html is an html formatted version of the output (with non-run tests removed).
I have been able to reproduce this bug using bonnie++. The process I used was to install Oneiric using the netboot installer to an external USB SATA drive and boot with that as my root filesystem (SD only has bootloaders & kernel).
Steps to reproduce on a running system:
On panda (no ping):
sudo apt-get install bonnie++
bonnie++ -n 0 -m "USB HD" -q 1>>bonnie.csv
After this runs, on a different system on the same network, start "sudo ping -i 0.001 panda" (assuming the panda is in the host lookup), then on the panda run:
bonnie++ -n 0 -m "USB HD with ping" -q 1>>bonnie.csv
This will produce the results attached (bonnie.csv). Bonnie.html is an html formatted version of the output (with non-run tests removed).