Home » Network Appliance » NS0-155 » Which is the most likely cause of this problem, and the best procedure to correct it?
Five minutes ago, you performed a single file SnapRestore on a large NFS file. 40% of your NFS users are now complaining about getting "stale file handles" for the file. Which is the most likely cause of this problem, and the best procedure to correct it?
A. This might be due to an NFS storage system and client mismatch. Check to see that these users have the same version of the NFS client that existed at the time the snapshot was taken.
B. NFS users why try to access a reverted file without first reopening it might get a "stale file handle" error message. Have the users try to reopen the file and see if the problem is resolved.
C. After a single file SnapRestore, NFS users have to reboot their systems. Have them reboot their systems.
D. These users are on a different subnet from the others. Start troubleshooting by checking their subnet.
Correct Answer: B
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
https://library.netapp.com/ecmdocs/ECMP1196991/html/GUID-35C9A4BA-02BA-4965-A366-698C1299E29D.html
Reverting a file to a selected Snapshot copy
Using snap restore to revert a single file to a selected Snapshot copy is practical when the file is so large that you cannot copy the previous file version from the Snapshot copy to the active file system.
Before you begin Ensure that you notify the network users before reverting a file so that they know that the current data in the file will be replaced by that of the selected Snapshot copy.
Note: NFS users who try to access a reverted file without first reopening it might get a stale file handle error message after the volume reversion.
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