Does the Slave pfs take up more space that the Master?
Sascha Wildner
saw at online.de
Thu Apr 22 09:24:38 PDT 2010
Am 22.04.2010 18:06, schrieb Sascha Wildner:
Am 16.04.2010 00:26, schrieb Matthew Dillon:
Yes, I was trying to think of scenarios and I think you are close,
that is likely the reason. The hammer cleanup code is only scanning
mounted PFSs. I verified this by umounting my /var/crash (which is
a PFS) and running hammer cleanup. It didn't check /var/crash's
PFS.
So its not master/slave, it is simply whether the PFS is mounted or
not that is the problem.
This is definitely a bug. hammer cleanup needs to go through all
the PFSs. It would be a nice mini-programming-project for someone
who wants to fix it in the hammer utility.
Matt,
I'm against hammer cleanup running on unmounted PFSs by default. What
else than not mounting it could be a clearer statement like "don't mess
with this in any way, please"?
All other file system related things in the system don't mess with
unmounted file systems.
I suggest making this a periodic(8) option which the user can turn on if
it is wanted.
OK :)
Lemme point out more clearly what I mean:
If the discussion is about manually issuing the cleanup command on an
unmounted PFS, that is fine with me. I agree it should work, just as
fsck works on unmounted file systems.
It's only the nightly cleanup via periodic(8) which I'm concerned about.
That should not touch my unmounted PFSs because I might have unmounted
them exactly for that reason: to not have the system mess with them
unless I say so.
Rereading your mail, it seems to me that it was rather the former thing
which was being discussed.
So the only thing I ask for actually is that tuxillo shall take care
that the nightly automatic cleanup only touches mounted PFSs, as it is
the case now.
I hope we all agree,
Sascha
--
http://yoyodyne.ath.cx
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