Displaying 20 results from an estimated 40000 matches similar to: "Btrfs going forward, was: Errors on an SSD drive"
2017 Aug 09
3
Errors on an SSD drive
To be honest, I'd not try a btrfs volume on a notebook SSD. I did that on a
couple of systems and it corrupted pretty quickly. I'd stick with xfs/ext4
if you manage to get the drive working again.
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2017 Aug 11
2
Btrfs going forward, was: Errors on an SSD drive
Warren Young wrote:
> [...]
>>> What do they suggest as a replacement?
>
> Stratis: https://stratis-storage.github.io/StratisSoftwareDesign.pdf
Can I use that now?
> The main downside to Stratis I see is that it looks like 1.0 is scheduled to coincide with RHEL 8, based on the release dates of RHELs past, which means it won?t have any kind of redundant storage options to
2017 Sep 08
3
cyrus spool on btrfs?
I hate top posting, but since you've got two items I want to comment on,
I'll suck it up for now.
Having SSDs alone will give you great performance regardless of
filesystem.? BTRFS isn't going to impact I/O any more significantly
than, say, XFS.? It does have serious stability/data integrity issues
that XFS doesn't have.? There's no reason not to use SSDs for storage of
2017 Sep 07
5
cyrus spool on btrfs?
Hi,
is there anything that speaks against putting a cyrus mail spool onto a
btrfs subvolume?
2017 Sep 08
2
cyrus spool on btrfs?
Mark Haney wrote:
> On 09/07/2017 01:57 PM, hw wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> is there anything that speaks against putting a cyrus mail spool onto a
>> btrfs subvolume?
>>
> I might be the lone voice on this, but I refuse to use btrfs for anything, much less a mail spool. I used it in production on DB and Web servers and fought corruption issues and scrubs
2017 Sep 08
5
cyrus spool on btrfs?
On 09/08/2017 09:49 AM, hw wrote:
> Mark Haney wrote:
>> I hate top posting, but since you've got two items I want to comment
>> on, I'll suck it up for now.
>
> I do, too, yet sometimes it?s reasonable.? I also hate it when the lines
> are too long :)
>
I'm afraid you'll have to live with it a bit longer.? Sorry.
>> Having SSDs alone will give you
2017 Aug 11
0
Btrfs going forward, was: Errors on an SSD drive
Chris Murphy wrote:
> Changing the subject since this is rather Btrfs specific now.
>
>
>
> On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 5:41 AM, hw <hw at gc-24.de> wrote:
>> Chris Murphy wrote:
>>>
>>> On Wed, Aug 9, 2017, 11:55 AM Mark Haney <mark.haney at neonova.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>> To be honest, I'd not try a btrfs volume on a notebook
2017 Sep 08
1
cyrus spool on btrfs?
I think it depends on who you ask. Facebook and Netflix are using it
extensively in production:
https://www.linux.com/news/learn/intro-to-linux/how-facebook-uses-linux-and-btrfs-interview-chris-mason
Though they have the in-house kernel engineering resources to
troubleshoot problems. When I see quotes like this [1] on the
product's WIKI:
"The parity RAID code has multiple serious
2017 Sep 08
3
cyrus spool on btrfs?
On 09/08/2017 01:31 PM, hw wrote:
> Mark Haney wrote:
>
> I/O is not heavy in that sense, that?s why I said that?s not the
> application.
> There is I/O which, as tests have shown, benefits greatly from low
> latency, which
> is where the idea to use SSDs for the relevant data has arisen from.?
> This I/O
> only involves a small amount of data and is not sustained
2017 Aug 09
7
Errors on an SSD drive
I am building a new system using an Kingston 240GB SSD drive I pulled
from my notebook (when I had to upgrade to a 500GB SSD drive). Centos
install went fine and ran for a couple days then got errors on the
console. Here is an example:
[168176.995064] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] tag#14 FAILED Result:
hostbyte=DID_BAD_TARGET driverbyte=DRIVER_OK
[168177.004050] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] tag#14 CDB: Read(10)
2017 Aug 11
2
Btrfs going forward, was: Errors on an SSD drive
Mark Haney wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 1:00 PM, Chris Murphy <lists at colorremedies.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Changing the subject since this is rather Btrfs specific now.
>>
>>
>>
>>>>
>>>> Sounds like a hardware problem. Btrfs is explicitly optimized for SSD,
>> the
>>>> maintainers worked for FusionIO for several
2017 Sep 08
2
cyrus spool on btrfs?
hw wrote:
> Mark Haney wrote:
<snip>
>> BTRFS isn't going to impact I/O any more significantly than, say, XFS.
>
> But mdadm does, the impact is severe. I know there are ppl saying
> otherwise, but I?ve seen the impact myself, and I definitely don?t want
> it on that particular server because it would likely interfere with
> other services.
<snip>
I
2019 May 17
2
is 'list_del corruption' fix available in Centos ?
Warren Young wrote:
> On May 17, 2019, at 9:53 AM, John Hodrien <J.H.Hodrien at leeds.ac.uk>
> wrote:
>> On Fri, 17 May 2019, James Szinger wrote:
>>> On Fri, May 17, 2019 at 3:17 AM John Hodrien
>>> <J.H.Hodrien at leeds.ac.uk> wrote:
>>>
>>>> RHEL advice would clearly be not to use btrfs.
>>>
>>> I'm curious, is
2017 Sep 08
4
cyrus spool on btrfs?
On Fri, September 8, 2017 9:48 am, hw wrote:
> m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:
>> hw wrote:
>>> Mark Haney wrote:
>> <snip>
>>>> BTRFS isn't going to impact I/O any more significantly than, say, XFS.
>>>
>>> But mdadm does, the impact is severe. I know there are ppl saying
>>> otherwise, but I??ve seen the impact myself, and I
2017 Aug 11
0
Btrfs going forward, was: Errors on an SSD drive
On Aug 11, 2017, at 11:00 AM, Chris Murphy <lists at colorremedies.com> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 5:41 AM, hw <hw at gc-24.de> wrote:
>> That?s one thing I?ve been wondering about: When using btrfs RAID, do you
>> need to somehow monitor the disks to see if one has failed?
>
> Yes.
>
> The block layer has no faulty device handling
That is one
2019 May 17
3
is "list_del corruption" fix available in Centos ?
On Fri, 17 May 2019, James Szinger wrote:
> On Fri, May 17, 2019 at 3:17 AM John Hodrien <J.H.Hodrien at leeds.ac.uk> wrote:
>> RHEL advice would clearly be not to use btrfs.
>
> I'm curious, is there anything in RHEL 8 that would replace BTRFS or
> ZFS? I'm experimenting with BTRFS on one system and the snapshot and
> subvolume features are nice.
I assume
2013 Mar 18
12
Impossible or Possible to Securely Erase File on Btrfs?
Hi,
After reading through the btrfs documentation I''m curious to know if
it''s possible to ever securely erase a file from a btrfs filesystem (or
ZFS for that matter). On non-COW filesystems atop regular HDDs one can
simply overwrite the file with zeros or random data using dd or some
other tool and rest assured that the blocks which contained the
sensitive information have
2017 Aug 11
1
Btrfs going forward, was: Errors on an SSD drive
On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 11:17 AM, Mark Haney <mark.haney at neonova.net> wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 1:00 PM, Chris Murphy <lists at colorremedies.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Changing the subject since this is rather Btrfs specific now.
>>
>>
>>
>> >>
>> >> Sounds like a hardware problem. Btrfs is explicitly optimized for SSD,
2016 Feb 09
4
Utility to zero unused blocks on disk
On Mon, Feb 8, 2016 at 3:18 PM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote:
> Chris Murphy wrote:
>> DBAN is obsolete. NIST 800-88 for some time now says to use secure erase
>> or enhanced security erase or crypto erase if supported.
>>
>> Other options do not erase data in remapped sectors.
>
> dban doesn't? What F/OSS does "secure erase"? And does it do
2017 Sep 08
1
cyrus spool on btrfs?
hw wrote:
> Mark Haney wrote:
>> On 09/08/2017 09:49 AM, hw wrote:
>>> Mark Haney wrote:
<snip>
> Probably with the very expensive SSDs suited for this ...
<snip>
>>>
>>> That?s because I do not store data on a single disk, without
>>> redundancy, and the SSDs I have are not suitable for hardware RAID.
<snip>
That's a biggie: