Slightly Urgent: XFS No Space Left On Device
Grozdan
neutrino8 at gmail.com
Thu Apr 2 09:41:38 CDT 2015
On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 4:36 PM, Grozdan <neutrino8 at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 4:32 PM, Dave Hall <kdhall at binghamton.edu> wrote:
>> Thanks for the help. Rookie error. I didn't set these mount options, but I
>> see that this option is set for all of the other XFS volumes I have.
>>
>> I am wondering why XFS would default this way though. Seems like
>> heuristically you could assume that a large volume on a 64-bit OS would need
>> 64-bit inodes. At least perhaps put out a message from mkfs.xfs suggesting
>> the use of inode64 on the mount command?
>
>
> inode64 has been made default, even for 32-bit systems, by recent
> versions of xfsprogs so I'd suggest to upgrade your xfsprogs
sorry, I was thinking of the crc flag. XFS uses by default inode64
from kernel versions 3.7 and up
>
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>> -Dave
>>
>> Dave Hall
>> Binghamton University
>> kdhall at binghamton.edu
>> 607-760-2328 (Cell)
>> 607-777-4641 (Office)
>>
>>
>> On 04/01/2015 08:12 PM, Dave Chinner wrote:
>>>
>>> On Wed, Apr 01, 2015 at 03:53:28PM -0400, Dave Hall wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Please pardon the 'top-post', but here is the additional information
>>>> requested:
>>>>
>>>> This is a Dell R720xd dual 8-core Xeon system with 128GB RAM. The
>>>> RAID controller is Dell PERC H710 Mini with 12 2TB disks in RAID6.
>>>>
>>>> The OS is Debian 6 with kernel 3.2.0-0.bpo.4-amd64 #1 SMP Debian
>>>> 3.2.65-1+deb7u2~bpo60+1 x86_64.
>>>>
>>>
>>> So defaults to inode32 allocation....
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> From /proc/mounts:
>>>>
>>>> /dev/sdb1 /data xfs
>>>>
>>>> rw,noexec,noatime,attr2,delaylog,allocsize=64k,logbsize=64k,sunit=128,swidth=1280,usrquota,prjquota
>>>> 0 0
>>>>
>>>
>>> ... and inode64 is not in the mount options.....
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> The output from xfs_info was previously included, but is repeated here:
>>>>
>>>> # xfs_info /data
>>>> meta-data=/dev/sdb1 isize=256 agcount=19,agsize=268435440
>>>> blks
>>>>
>>>
>>> Inode allocation requires contiguous free space of 16k aligned to 8k
>>> boundaries to allocate new inode chunks. Also, 1TB AGs, so with
>>> inode32, inodes can only be allocated in AG 0.
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Here are the more extensive freesp outputs for each of the 19 AGs:
>>>>
>>>> # xfs_db -r /dev/sdb1 -c 'freesp -s -a0'
>>>> from to extents blocks pct
>>>> 1 1 747 747 19.68
>>>> 2 3 1045 2496 65.77
>>>> 4 7 138 552 14.55
>>>> total free extents 1930
>>>> total free blocks 3795
>>>> average free extent size 1.96632
>>>>
>>>
>>> And that says you have no correctly aligned free 16k extents that
>>> can be allocated in AG 0. i.e. no more inodes can be allocated, and
>>> that's where the ENOSPC is coming from.
>>>
>>> Unmount, add the inode64 mount option, and you'll be able to
>>> allocate inodes again as they will be allowed to be allocated in
>>> any AG, not just AG 0.
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> Dave.
>>>
>>
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> Yours truly
--
Yours truly
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