Yes, indexed dirs removes this limit. For that you'll need to upgrade the
kernel/fs and the tools. Best if the kernel is .32 or higher. The tools should
be 1.6.x. Debian has a drop of 1.6.3 tools. Check if they have built it.
You can read about this and other features in the ocfs2 1.6 user's guide on
oss.oracle.com.
On Nov 18, 2010, at 9:13 PM, Sergey Bolbat <madd.korben at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi.
> I have a system storage HP MSA 2012 with 12 drives in it: 8 drives are 2 Tb
each and 4 are 1 Tb each. All of them are in array RAID 1+0.
> This storage is connected to two servers which use data, stored on the
storage. So I'm using OCFS2 on these two nodes.
> Today, after long time of successfull work with it, I've found that it
has a limit of 32000 subdirs.
> The trouble is I have more than 32000 subdirs and amount of subdirs will
only increase.
>
> Is there a way to overcome this limit? I've found this topic:
http://www.mail-archive.com/ocfs2-users at oss.oracle.com/msg03151.html which
says that there is an option named "indexed directories" and it can
help, but I didn't find the way to turn it on.
> Could you please advice me some solution, by which I could update OCFS2
settings and not to loose all of my data on the drives.
> My OS is Debian Lenny, 2.6.26 kernel (both of servers).
> OCFS2 Tools version is 1.4.1.
>
> Thanks.
> _______________________________________________
> Ocfs2-users mailing list
> Ocfs2-users at oss.oracle.com
> http://oss.oracle.com/mailman/listinfo/ocfs2-users
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