Fu-Ming_Tsai wrote:
> What I meant is that if there are more and more objects, maybe it cause some
> problem because there are a big Data.fs. Doesn't it cause any problem if
> there are a big big Data.fs?
Not particularly. If you hit the upper limit of your disk or filesystem
limits on file size/p
--On Donnerstag, 14. April 2005 12:07 Uhr +0800 Fu-Ming_Tsai
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What I meant is that if there are more and more objects, maybe it cause
some problem because there are a big Data.fs. Doesn't it cause any
problem if there are a big big Data.fs?
I am not getting your point?
Fu-Ming_Tsai wrote:
>What I meant is that if there are more and more objects, maybe it cause some
>problem because there are a big Data.fs. Doesn't it cause any problem if
>there are a big big Data.fs?
>
>
>
the data.fs kcan be several gigabites
robert
>On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 17:27:39 +0200, Andre
What I meant is that if there are more and more objects, maybe it cause some
problem because there are a big Data.fs. Doesn't it cause any problem if
there are a big big Data.fs?
On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 17:27:39 +0200, Andreas Jung wrote
> --On Mittwoch, 13. April 2005 23:09 Uhr +0800 Fu-Ming_Tsai
>
On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 05:27:39PM +0200, Andreas Jung wrote:
> There should be exactly *one* Data.fs file + Data.fs.index + maybe a
> Data.fs.pack
> file from the last ZODB packing operation.
Also Data.fs.tmp.
--
Paul Winkler
http://www.slinkp.com
--On Mittwoch, 13. April 2005 23:09 Uhr +0800 Fu-Ming_Tsai
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello, all
The file Data.fs is growing up if we use zope.
Of course it grows...it's your Data.fs containing all your data. And you
have
to pack it on a regular basis (Control Panel -> database administration)