Hi Eric,
am I reading it correct, that *rgw_max_put_size *only limits files, that
are not uploaded as multipart?
My understanding would be, with these default values, that someone can
upload a 5TB file in 1 500MB multipart objects.
But I want to limit the maximum file size, so no one can uplo
Hi,
I would like to add a datapoint. I rebooted one of our client machines
into kernel 5.4.0-135-generic (latest ubuntu 20.04 non hwe kernel) and
performed the same test (copying a large file within cephfs).
Both the source and target files stay in cache completely:
# fincore bar
RES PA
Hello Boris,
I think you may be looking for these RGW daemon parameters :
# ceph config help *rgw_max_put_size*
rgw_max_put_size - Max size (in bytes) of regular (non multi-part) object
upload.
(size, advanced)
Default: 5368709120
Can update at runtime: true
Services: [rgw]
# ceph config
Hi,
is it possible to somehow limit the maximum file/object size?
I've read that I can limit the size of multipart objects and the amount of
multipart objects, but I would like to limit the size of each object in the
index to 100GB.
I haven't found a config or quota value, that would fit.
Cheers
Hi,
On 07.12.22 11:58, Stefan Kooman wrote:
On 5/13/22 09:38, Xiubo Li wrote:
On 5/12/22 12:06 AM, Stefan Kooman wrote:
Hi List,
We have quite a few linux kernel clients for CephFS. One of our
customers has been running mainline kernels (CentOS 7 elrepo) for
the past two years. They starte
Hi,
We were also affected by this bug when we deployed a new Pacific cluster.
Any news about the release of this fix to Ceph Pacific? It looks done
for Quincy version but not Pacific.
https://github.com/ceph/ceph/pull/47292
Regards,
Adrien
Le 05/10/2022 à 13:21, Anh Phan Tuan a écrit :
It s
Hi,
I try to set rdma setting in Ceph cluster. But I set config, it's stucked...
# ceph --version
ceph version 17.2.5 (98318ae89f1a893a6ded3a640405cdbb33e08757) quincy
(stable)
# ceph config set global ms_type async+rdma
# ceph -s
2022-12-09T17:53:04.954+0900 7f85b55b7700 -1 Infiniband verify_pre
Hello together,
@Alex: I am not sure for what to look in /sys/block//device
There are a lot of files.Is there anything I should check in particular?
You have sysfs access in /sys/block//device - this will show a lot
> of settings. You can go to this directory on CentOS vs. Ubuntu, and see if
> a