James A. Peltier wrote:
----- Original Message ----- | John R Pierce wrote: | > On 8/4/2015 7:14 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote: | >> | >> CentOS 6.6 (well, just updated with CR). I have some xfs filesystems | >> on a RAID. They've been mounted with the option of defaults. Will it break | >> the whole thing if I now change that to inode64, or was that something | >> I needed to do when the fs was created, or is there some conversion I | >> can run that won't break everything? | > | > you can enable that option at any time, but once you've used it, you | > can't go back. | > | > note that 64 bit inodes cause a minor issue with NFS if you have shares | > exported other than the root. there's an easy workaround. | | Thanks, John. I believe I did exports elsewhere, last year. This just came | up on a huge backup RAID - the rsync was failing, though there was plenty | space, and inode64 just popped up from my stack - it was just the | conversion that I didn't remember the answer to. | | For those looking at this, here's a gotcha: you *cannot* change fstab, | then mount -o remount, you *must* umount, then mount. Merely -o remount | fails to make the change. | | mark
Some older 32-bit software will likely have problems addressing any content outside of the 2^32 bit inode range. You will be able to see it, but reading and writing said data will likely be problematic
Fortunately, I think we've gotten rid of all our 32-bit servers, which is where people work, and workstations, as well.
mark