- Original Message -
| On 8/4/2015 12:47 PM, James A. Peltier wrote:
| Some older 32-bit software will likely have problems addressing any content
| outside of the 2^32 bit inode range. You will be able to see it, but
| reading and writing said data will likely be problematic
|
|
|
On 2015-08-05, James A. Peltier jpelt...@sfu.ca wrote:
This is not at all our findings on large file systems or filesystems with
large numbers of inodes. We in fact on many occasions ran into such
problems. To the OP, if you're 64-bit everywhere there's no problems so
enjoy the benefits
Hi, folks,
CentOS 6.6 (well, just updated with CR). I have some xfs filesystems on
a RAID. They've been mounted with the option of defaults. Will it break
the whole thing if I now change that to inode64, or was that something
I needed to do when the fs was created, or is there some conversion
On 8/4/2015 7:14 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Hi, folks,
CentOS 6.6 (well, just updated with CR). I have some xfs filesystems on
a RAID. They've been mounted with the option of defaults. Will it break
the whole thing if I now change that to inode64, or was that something
I needed to do when
John R Pierce wrote:
On 8/4/2015 7:14 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
CentOS 6.6 (well, just updated with CR). I have some xfs filesystems
on a RAID. They've been mounted with the option of defaults. Will it break
the whole thing if I now change that to inode64, or was that something
I needed
James A. Peltier wrote:
- Original Message -
| John R Pierce wrote:
| On 8/4/2015 7:14 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
|
| CentOS 6.6 (well, just updated with CR). I have some xfs filesystems
| on a RAID. They've been mounted with the option of defaults. Will it
break
| the whole
- Original Message -
| John R Pierce wrote:
| On 8/4/2015 7:14 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
|
| CentOS 6.6 (well, just updated with CR). I have some xfs filesystems
| on a RAID. They've been mounted with the option of defaults. Will it break
| the whole thing if I now change that to
On 8/4/2015 12:47 PM, James A. Peltier wrote:
Some older 32-bit software will likely have problems addressing any content
outside of the 2^32 bit inode range. You will be able to see it, but reading
and writing said data will likely be problematic
The 99% of software that just does
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