On Tue, 2005-02-15 at 16:50 -0500, David Wood wrote: > On Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Jeffrey W. Baker wrote: > > That said, XFS is still your best choice if you've hit the hard limits > > in ext3. > > Ahh... _that_ said, it looks like (until they fix it) XFS is the best > choice for punishing your enemies with. :o > > I hate to say it, but this is not the only place I have heard Linux/XFS > horror stories. Of course I actually love experimenting, and there's > nothing wrong with a work in progress, just so long as it's labeled. > > I guess the moral of the story is that if you've got a big partition, I > hope you've got an even bigger backup tape. ;)
Maybe the moral is you should use what everybody else uses. ext2/3 and to some extent Reiser are very well tested because practically everybody uses them. Major bugs in ext3 are readily apparent because it has millions of users. Major bugs in XFS are not found until one of sgi's 17 customers happens to trip over one. Worse, XFS is the sole user of lots of in-kernel code. ext3 uses lots of underlying code that is also used by other kernel pieces. The segmentation helps in rooting out problems. It's a many-eyes problem. There's a "Safe Operating Area" for most software. Probably if you went off and made a 4TB ext3 volume with the journal on a iSCSI device and then scattered it with 150 million files, you would run into a problem. That's unknown territory. But staying within a normal < 1TB volume with < 10 million files will almost certainly work without a problem. Once I worked at a company and we bought NetApp filers. NetApp sales engineers told us there was no such thing as fsck for WAFL, their filesystem. 6 months later we encountered something uniquely horrible known as a "wack". "Oh," they suddenly remembered, "there's no fsck unless..." We were not a mainstream user. They had never tested our workload. We switched to VxFS on EMC. 6 months later VxFS destroyed an extremely large filesystem. We were out of the mainstream. Never been tested. We switched to many small Linux servers with medium-sized ext2 partitions. No problems ever. End of fable :) -jwb -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

