You should read more of the resources available at openvz.org:
http://openvz.org/Ploop/Getting_started#Resizing_a_ploop_image
There are no specific inode settings for ploop, it creates a private
ext4 filesystem for each container, therefore the inode limit is only
dependent on the filesystem (ext4).
On 9/30/2014 10:49 AM, Matt wrote:
In ploop, can inodes and disk size easily be increased for a container?
On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 7:34 PM, Kir Kolyshkin <k...@openvz.org> wrote:
On 09/19/2014 11:45 AM, Matt wrote:
I have a container currently using about 150GB of space. It is very
random I/O hungry. Has many small files. Will converting it to ploop
hurt I/O performance?
In case of many small files it might actually improve the performance.
ploop performance is very close to usual FS, except for then the image
is growing -- this operation somewhat slows it down as it needs to allocate
extra blocks and modify the block address table. I guess it's not an issue
in your case.
But don't take my word for it, give it a try yourself!
Kir.
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