On 10/21/05, Bob Beck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > i can certainly see how this would be annoying from a
> > scalability standpoint, but how often are you changing user
> > storage limits? it would, however, be most convenient to just
> > have one huge-ass partition :).
> >
>
> Annoying f
> i can certainly see how this would be annoying from a
> scalability standpoint, but how often are you changing user
> storage limits? it would, however, be most convenient to just
> have one huge-ass partition :).
>
Annoying from a scalability standpoint? gimme a break. one huge
filesy
per,
>We can argue back and forth on the pros and cons of building
>1TB
>partitions or not, but the need for these giant allocations
are real
>enough and from a commen/broader view (small business) the
demand is
>also moving closer and closer. At work we have a disk-to-disk
backup
>server for
per engelbrecht wrote:
> Nick Holland wrote:
...
>> Would I love to see the 1T limit removed? Sure. HOWEVER, I think I
>> would handle this application the exact same way if it didn't exist
>> (that might not be true: I might foolishly plowed ahead with the One Big
>> Pile philosophy, and regrett
Nick Holland wrote:
Jason Dixon wrote:
On Oct 20, 2005, at 1:49 PM, Joe Advisor wrote:
Congrats on the cool OpenBSD SAN installation. I was
wondering how you are dealing with the relatively
large filesystem. By default, if you lose power to
the server, OpenBSD will do a rather long fsck wh
Jason Dixon wrote:
> On Oct 20, 2005, at 1:49 PM, Joe Advisor wrote:
>
>> Congrats on the cool OpenBSD SAN installation. I was
>> wondering how you are dealing with the relatively
>> large filesystem. By default, if you lose power to
>> the server, OpenBSD will do a rather long fsck when
>> comi
On Oct 20, 2005, at 1:49 PM, Joe Advisor wrote:
Congrats on the cool OpenBSD SAN installation. I was
wondering how you are dealing with the relatively
large filesystem. By default, if you lose power to
the server, OpenBSD will do a rather long fsck when
coming back up. To alleviate this, ther
Congrats on the cool OpenBSD SAN installation. I was
wondering how you are dealing with the relatively
large filesystem. By default, if you lose power to
the server, OpenBSD will do a rather long fsck when
coming back up. To alleviate this, there are numerous
suggestions running around that invo
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