Re: the " 'official' point of view" expressed by kernelnewbies.orgregarding reiser4 inclusion

From: venom
Date: Tue Aug 01 2006 - 07:00:04 EST


planning sometimes is not possible, exspecially in certain highly stressed environment.

Just think. I had 3 years ago a database that was 2 TB, we were supposing it could grow in three years of 6 TB, but now it is 40 TB because
the market situation is changed, and with this the number of the users and their needs.

Please you have to suppose that when you have to deal with filesystems use for some kind of services, it is impossible to predict the grown rate, and this is true also about the numeber of used i-nodes.



On Tue, 1 Aug 2006, Helge Hafting wrote:

On Mon, Jul 31, 2006 at 05:59:58PM +0200, Adrian Ulrich wrote:
Hello Matthias,

This looks rather like an education issue rather than a technical limit.

We aren't talking about the same issue: I was asking to do it
on-the-fly. Umounting the filesystem, running e2fsck and resize2fs
is something different ;-)

Which is untrue at least for Solaris, which allows resizing a life file
system. FreeBSD and Linux require an unmount.

Correct: You can add more inodes to a Solaris UFS on-the-fly if you are
lucky enough to have some free space available.

A colleague of mine happened to create a ~300gb filesystem and started
to migrate Mailboxes (Maildir-style format = many small files (1-3kb))
to the new LUN. At about 70% the filesystem ran out of inodes; Not a
big deal with VxFS because such a problem is fixable within seconds.
What would have happened if he had used UFS? mkfs -G wouldn't work
because he had no additional Diskspace left... *ouch*..

This case is solvable by planning. When you know that the new fs
must be created with all inodes from the start, simply count
how many you need before migration. (And add a decent safety margin.)
That's what I do with my home machine ask disks wear out every third
year or so. The tools for ext2/3 tells how many inodes are in use,
and the new fs can be made accordingly. The approach works for bigger
machines too of course.

Helge Hafting

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