Marcus- Well, it's not xfs, then.
IIRC, the inode setting is hard-coded into the kernel (at least it was in the 2.2 kernels). You may need to edit some limits.h file or something like that and recompile. It seems that at some point this requirement was changed or made accessible through /proc, but I'm foggy on the details... It's been a while and I only had to do one of those recompiles once. Agreed, it is confusing. Can you post more info? Perhaps you will need to implement some sort of SNMP monitoring on your stations to get a handle on what is happening there. Jason On Sun, 2 Jun 2002 10:14:57 -0700 "Marcus Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I forgot about the XFS bit. But the funny thing is that > I'm not even > using XFS as yet, or at least I have the lts.conf file > parameter USE > XFS = N. But I'm glad you reminded me because I'll > probably use it > again. > > As for the inode-max, I've been told that RedHat doesn't > use the > inode-max parameter. In the /proc/dev/fs directory there > is a > file-max option that I bump up to 65535 using an echo > statement in > the startup script /etc/rc.d/rc.local. > > Still all very confusing. _______________________________________________________________ Don't miss the 2002 Sprint PCS Application Developer's Conference August 25-28 in Las Vegas -- http://devcon.sprintpcs.com/adp/index.cfm _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.openprojects.net
