Hello guys,
I'm using OCFS2 for a shared storage (on SAN). I just saw that the inode
usage is really high although these filesystems are used for Oracle DATA
storage. So there are really a few big files.
I don't understand why the inode usage is so high with such few big files
(As an example :
Hoe did you figure this out? Also, which version of the kernel are you
using?
On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 1:05 AM, Nicolas Michel
be.nicolas.mic...@gmail.comwrote:
Hello guys,
I'm using OCFS2 for a shared storage (on SAN). I just saw that the inode
usage is really high although these filesystems
That number is typically calculated. So it just could be bad arithmetic.
But that should not affect the other ops.
On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 12:40 PM, Nicolas Michel be.nicolas.mic...@gmail.com
wrote:
I don't know if it's the root cause of my problems or if it causes any
problem at all. But I
Hello - I'm hoping someone can help with this.
I'm seeing the errors below in a 3 node cluster with 4 ocfs2-mounted
filesystems. The errors started about a week ago.
System specifics (all 3 cluster nodes):
RHEL 5.6 (kernel 2.6.18-238.el5)
OCFS versions:
rpm -qa| grep ocfs