On Tue, 2003-10-21 at 18:19, Glenn Burkhardt wrote:
> Have you only seen this with XFS, or with other filesystems, too?
> Will ext3 be more robust for power failures?
> 
> gracias...

100% robust.... nothing.. especially if the HDD buffer is near full (8mb
on some) Dang site better than ext2 yes.  But the only system that
protects against sudden power down.  UPS.

James

> 
> On Tuesday 21 October 2003 04:03 pm, Luca Olivetti wrote:
> > Glenn Burkhardt ha scritto:
> > > I've seen a couple of times that files are filled with zero's after
> > > rebooting. This time it was my ".bashrc" file.  I might have just powered
> > > off the machine, but the this file wasn't open for writing at the time of
> > > shutdown. After turning the machine on last night, I noticed that my
> > > shell prompt had changed, and discovered that the file was full of ASCII
> > > null characters.
> > >
> > > I've seen this happen a couple of times before on other machines.  Then
> > > the file "/usr/share/config/kdm/kdmrc" had been similiarly trashed - full
> > > of zeros.  And, it seems that the file size was larger than usual.
> > >
> > > I've been using the XFS filesystem on these machines for a couple of
> > > years now.  Is this a failure of the disk drive, or should I switch to
> > > ext3 ??
> >
> > I've seen this many times (xfs too). Don't know the cause (apart from
> > power failure/reset after a crash), but I'd like to.
> >
> > Bye
> 
> 
> 
> ______________________________________________________________________
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