| To: | Austin Gonyou <austin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: Direct I/O and Oracle |
| From: | Steve Lord <lord@xxxxxxx> |
| Date: | 22 Mar 2002 11:20:56 -0600 |
| Cc: | Andriy Korud <akorud@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx |
| In-reply-to: | <1016817298.15891.1.camel@UberGeek> |
| References: | <00e101c1d1a7$8cc292f0$1c00a8c0@xxxxxxxxxx> <1016817298.15891.1.camel@UberGeek> |
| Sender: | owner-linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx |
On Fri, 2002-03-22 at 11:14, Austin Gonyou wrote: > For the most part it should just work, unless you're talking about using > raw devices, then you must setup raw devices, aside from that, though, > it should just work. Unless Oracle passes the O_DIRECT flag into the kernel is will not use O_DIRECT. There has been a suggestion that a mount option be provided to make the kernel assume O_DIRECT. It is not as simple as this since O_DIRECT has alignment constraints and if the application made non aligned requests they would be failed. So really Oracle is the only one who can help here. Steve -- Steve Lord voice: +1-651-683-3511 Principal Engineer, Filesystem Software email: lord@xxxxxxx |
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