On 10/08 11:07 , Frédéric Massot wrote: > After moving the BackupPC data on the new logical volume and thus the > new file system, the old logical volume will no longer be used. I could > delete it but how I could use this free space?
Expand your new volume and filesystem to use it. Are you using LVM, or just plain partitions? > Does with XFS the inode number increases with increasing file system size? XFS doesn't really have a problem with inodes. > Some people use XFS on Debian without problem? I've used it for some years. If you do use XFS, make sure you have enough space in RAM+swap to accomodate the xfs_check tool, which is notoriously memory-hungry. My suggested filesystem layout is something like: 30GB /, using ext4 10GB swap remainder of space in a separate partition mounted on /var/lib/backuppc. I've found I needed a good 5GB or more swapfile to accomodate fscking a 9TB filesystem; but that's only the rougest metric. So I'll suggest 10GB of swap. It seems like a horrible waste of space since most will never be used; but compared to a multi-TB filesystem its vanishingly small, and it simplifies the process when you fsck your XFS filesystem (which shouldn't be necessary; but hardware does fail, and when you have hardware errors, sometimes you need to fsck). -- Carl Soderstrom Systems Administrator Real-Time Enterprises www.real-time.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Don't let slow site performance ruin your business. Deploy New Relic APM Deploy New Relic app performance management and know exactly what is happening inside your Ruby, Python, PHP, Java, and .NET app Try New Relic at no cost today and get our sweet Data Nerd shirt too! http://p.sf.net/sfu/newrelic-dev2dev _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/