On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 03:15:26PM +0000, Harry wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> We've got a moderately large disk (~2TB) into an inconsistent state,
> such that it's going to want a quotacheck the next time we mount it
> (it's currently mounted with quota accounting inactive). Our tests
> suggest this is going to take several hours, and cause an outage we
> can't afford.
What tests are you performing to suggest a quotacheck of a small
filesystem will take hours? (yes, 2TB is a *small* filesystem).
(xfs_info, df -i, df -h, storage hardware, etc are all relevant
here).
> We're wondering whether there's a 'nuke the site from orbit' option
> that will let us avoid it. The plan would be to:
> - switch off quotas and delete them completely, using the commands:
> -- disable
> -- off
> -- remove
> - remount the drive with -o prjquota, hoping that there will not be
> a quotacheck, because we've deleted all the old quota data
Mounting with a quota enabled *forces* a quota check if quotas
aren't currently enabled. You cannot avoid it; it's the way quota
consistency is created.
> - run a script gradually restore all the quotas, one by one and in
> good time, from our own external backups (we've got the quotas in a
> database basically).
Can't be done - quotas need to be consistent with what is currently
on disk, not what you have in a backup somewhere.
> So the questions are:
> - is there a way to remove all quota information from a mounted drive?
> (the current mount status seems to be that it tried to mount it with
mount with quotas on and turn them off via xfs_quota,i or mount
without quota options at all. Then run the remove command in
xfs_quota.
> -o prjquota but that quota accounting is *not* active)
Not possible.
> - will it work and let us remount the drive with -o prjquota without
> causing a quotacheck?
No.
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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