Hello Sunil, I checked the inode usage with df -i I can't check the kernel version running on the system now because I'm not at work but it's a SLES 10 SP2, so a pretty old kernel I suppose.
Nicolas 2013/7/3 Sunil Mushran <sunil.mush...@gmail.com> > Hoe did you figure this out? Also, which version of the kernel are you > using? > > > On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 1:05 AM, Nicolas Michel < > be.nicolas.mic...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hello guys, >> >> I'm using OCFS2 for a shared storage (on SAN). I just saw that the inode >> usage is really high although these filesystems are used for Oracle DATA >> storage. So there are really a few big files. >> >> I don't understand why the inode usage is so high with such few big files >> (As an example : one of the filesystem have 16 files and directories but >> the ~26 million of inodes are almost used!) >> >> My questions : >> - is the inode usage can be a problem in such a situation >> - if it is : how can I reduce their number used? Or increase the pool of >> available inodes? >> - why so many inodes are used with such a few files? I was sure that >> there were traditionaly one inode used for one file or one directory. >> >> -- >> Nicolas MICHEL >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Ocfs2-users mailing list >> Ocfs2-users@oss.oracle.com >> https://oss.oracle.com/mailman/listinfo/ocfs2-users >> > > -- Nicolas MICHEL
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