On Wed, Apr 07, 2010 at 07:51:15AM -0700, Tom Sightler wrote: > On Wed, 2010-04-07 at 15:59 +0200, Rainer Traut wrote: > > Am 07.04.2010 09:46, schrieb Karsten Weiss: > > > XFS has its problems on RHEL, too. See e.g. > > > http://www.bofh-hunter.com/2009/09/04/rhel-5-4-and-xfs/ > > > > > > > You refer to a bug in ext4 in el5 but I see no bug in the xfs > > implementation. > > So you compare apples and oranges. > > Yep, I noticed that as well. The only real "problem" with XFS seems to > be that Redhat doesn't package xfsprogs, even though they suggest using > XFS for >16TB filesystems in the 5.4 release notes. The tools were easy > enough to find for CentOS so I'll give XFS a try. I'll also contact my > Redhat rep and see if he can provide an answer as to what "layered > product" includes the XFS tools. > > It's disappointing to find that ext4 has the ability to support what I > want, but not the tools to get there and it appears that these tools > don't exist yet anywhere except maybe an unstable git tree. There are > comments from maintainers from more than a year ago that updating > e2fsprogs is "one of the last remaining tasks" but apparently that task > is much more difficult than anticipated. We've been very happy with > ext4 in our testing but this is certainly a showstopper for it in this > particular use case. > > Thanks for all the feedback, > Tom
You can actually run GFS2 in a single node mode. I believe I've even seen RH suggest this as an option for large filesystems in the past... We're going more and more Solaris+ZFS (and from that, starting to use Nexenta which makes it even sipmler) for these sorts of use cases, though we do have an xfs on CentOS or two out there. Ray _______________________________________________ rhelv5-list mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list
