any idea why my server crashes when I am creating a 200 G tar file? I am using tar -zcvf and the original file is about 250 G Centos wrote: > ok, the file system is ext and block size is the default which is 4096, > so I should be able to have 16 Tera Byte filesystem and 2 Tera Byte > files size. > > I had to transfer some files which the total size was about 250 G > so I used tar -zcvf to tar and gzip them , but server crashed and > rebooted > two times, once when tar.gz file was about 32 G and the second time > tar.gz file was about 64 G, any idea what could be the cause. > > tar -zcvf tar.gz /somefolder/* > > Thanks > > > Brett Schroeder wrote: > >> Centos wrote: >> >>> Thank you Jim, >>> >>> How can I find the current block size and file system type ? >>> >>> >> >> File system type can be found in 3rd column of /etc/fstab. >> >> For ext{2,3} file systems the block size can be found by >> >> tune2fs -l /dev/XXXX | grep "Block size" >> >> where XXX is something like >> 1) sda1 (for SCSI or SATA partitions) >> 2) md0 (for software raid devices) >> 3) VolGroup00/LogVol00 (for Logical Volumes under LVM) >> >> >>> Jim Perrin wrote: >>> >>>> On 7/25/07, Centos <centos at unixplanet.biz> wrote: >>>> >>>>> What is the largest file size that can be created on Linux ? >>>>> is there any limitation ? >>>>> >>>> This depends on several things, including the architecture (x86_64 vs >>>> x86) and the blocksize used for the filesystem. >>>> >>>> For ext3, it breaks out like this -> >>>> >>>> Block size Max file size Max filesystem size >>>> 1KiB 16GiB 2TiB >>>> 2KiB 256GiB 8TiB >>>> 4KiB 2 TiB 16TiB >>>> 8KiB 16TiB 32TiB >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> CentOS mailing list >>> CentOS at centos.org >>> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> CentOS mailing list >> CentOS at centos.org >> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >