On Wednesday 19 September 2001 09:59, Floyd Mann wrote:
> > > > And while I am on the subject - we are aware of an I/O bug in 2.2.14
> > > kernel
> > >
> > > > even without the special "safety" patch from SuSE) that make MySQL
> > corrupt
> > > > tables under heavy load. Two of our users were running 2.2.14 kernel
> > and
> > > were
> > > > getting their tables randomly corrupted. The problems went away after
> > > upgrade
> > > > to 2.2.10.

Oops, I meant 2.2.19...

> > 
> Hey Sasha - 
> 
> Thanks for mentioning this.  We started running MySQL 3.23.33 on a 2.2.14
> kernel (RH 6.2) about six months ago.  Almost immediately we started
> experiencing table corruption.  We have consistently been having 2 or 3
> tables get corrupted a month ever since.  I've been scratching my head
> trying to figure out what the heck I've been doing wrong or what has been
> the cause, but I think you just answered my question.  Looks like I'll be
> upgrading my kernel soon!

Glad to hear the confirmation from another user. Thanks for reporting this.

-- 
MySQL Development Team
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   __  ___     ___ ____  __ 
  /  |/  /_ __/ __/ __ \/ /   Sasha Pachev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 / /|_/ / // /\ \/ /_/ / /__  MySQL AB, http://www.mysql.com/
/_/  /_/\_, /___/\___\_\___/  Provo, Utah, USA
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