Correct usage of inode64/running out of inodes
Eric Sandeen
sandeen at sandeen.net
Mon Jun 29 15:44:41 CDT 2009
Adam Donald wrote:
> Thank you for your response. To be honest, I only ran out of "space"
> (inodes) once on this volume a month or so ago, and I recall receiving a
> ENOSPC type error at that time. At the time I received out of space
> errors I found the xfs_db command and have since started to monitor the
> ifree value, deleting files when I felt that ifree was dipping too low,
> as I was unable to apply the inode64 option without first taking down
> various production systems. When the time came this past weekend to
> apply the inode64 option, I was expecting the ifree option value to
> shoot up dramatically (several hundred, perhaps), and instead the ifree
> value remained unaffected, the same as mounting the volume without the
> inode64 option.
I don't -think- that the inode64 option affects the value reported via
statfs (though maybe it should; for dynamically allocated inodes it's
all make-believe anyway)
> Given the fact that I have this volume mounted with the inode64 option,
> have roughly 7.5TB free, and show ifree with a double digit number
> (currently 30 on our system), is there a an inconsistency between the
> total amount of free space available and the number of free inodes
> available?
hand-wavily, no, it seems fine... the way xfs reports free inodes (or
available inodes) is to look at how many blocks are free, and then how
many inodes -could- be created in that number of blocks, which is why
it's often absurdly high numbers.
inode32 behavior, fragmented free space, or lack of stripe-aligned space
(I think...) can sometimes cause spurious ENOSPC when looking for a new
inode...
-Eric
> Thanks again for the input, I appreciate it!
>
>
> AD
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