I do see in the lfs setquota usage message and lfs-setquota.1 man page: "The maximum quota grace time is 2^48 - 1 seconds."
That's about 9M years, so it should probably be long enough? It might make sense to map "-1" internally to "(1 << 48) - 1" to make this easier. On May 8, 2019, at 17:18, Harr, Cameron <ha...@llnl.gov> wrote: > > I had tested first and couldn't find a way to do so, so I was curious if > there was some undocumented way. I'm proceeding with, "No, there's not a > way." > > On 5/6/19 12:52 PM, Andreas Dilger wrote: >> On Apr 11, 2019, at 11:02, Harr, Cameron <ha...@llnl.gov> wrote: >>> We're exploring an idea where we keep soft quotas enabled so that users >>> will be notified they're nearing their hard quotas (via in-house >>> scripts), but users don't like that the soft quota becomes a hard block >>> after the grace period. I can understand their rationale as well that >>> they should be able to write up to their hard quota always. >>> >>> Is there a way to set the grace period as unlimited (e.g. lfs setquota >>> -t -1 ...)? >> Judging by the lack of response, I don't think anyone has tried this, but >> it also seems like something that could be tested quite easily? >> >> Cheers, Andreas >> -- >> Andreas Dilger >> Principal Lustre Architect >> Whamcloud >> Cheers, Andreas -- Andreas Dilger Principal Lustre Architect Whamcloud _______________________________________________ lustre-discuss mailing list lustre-discuss@lists.lustre.org http://lists.lustre.org/listinfo.cgi/lustre-discuss-lustre.org