Vivek Khera wrote: > My only fear of this is that once this system is in production, that's > pretty much it. Maintenance windows are about 1 year apart, usually > longer.
Others will have to comment about that. I have only one 7-CURRENT in production (because of ZFS) and I had only one panic (in ZFS). But this machine is not heavily utilized. >> When you get there, you'll need to create 1 small RAID volume (<= 1 GB) >> from which to boot (and probably use it for root) and use the rest for >> whatever your choice is (doesn't really matter at this point). This is >> because you can't have fdisk or bsdlabel partitions larger than 2 TB and >> you can't boot from GPT. > > So what your saying here is that I can't do either my option 1 or 2, but > have to create smaller volumes exported as individual drives? Or just > that I can't do 1, because my case 2 I could make three 2Tb fdisk slices > which bsdlabel can then partition? fdisk and bsdlabels both have a limit: because of the way they store the data about the disk space they span, they can't store values that reference space > 2 TB. In particular, every partition must start at an offset <= 2 TB, and cannot be larger than 2 TB. In theory, the maximum you could do in "normal" (read on) circumstances is have a 4 TB volume partitioned into two 2 TB slices/partitions, and that's it. In practice, you can't usefully partition drives larger than 2 TB at all. There's one (also theoretical... I doubt anyone has tried it) way out of it: simulate a device with larger sector size through gnop(8). For example, if you use a 1 KB sector size you'll double all the limits (at least for bsdlabel, I think fdisk is stuck in 512-byte sectors) to 4 TB, for 4 KB sectors, to 16 TB). I know from experience that UFS can handle sectors up to 8 KB, other file systems might not. (ref: sys/disklabel.h: struct partition { /* the partition table */ u_int32_t p_size; /* number of sectors in partition */ u_int32_t p_offset; /* starting sector */ u_int32_t p_fsize; /* filesystem basic fragment size */ u_int8_t p_fstype; /* filesystem type, see below */ u_int8_t p_frag; /* filesystem fragments per block */ u_int16_t p_cpg; /* filesystem cylinders per group */ } d_partitions[MAXPARTITIONS]; /* actually may be more */ )
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