Thanks Paul and others.

I've had some tell me that you can do the inode increase as you create
the drive/format it/partition it if you have a post % % process.. but
no one has been able to tell me step by step how to do this!!!

If I use the gui to do an install.. can't figure it out..

A workaround (ugly at best) is to create the initial root partition on
a small chunk of the drive, and then go in and reformat/repartition
the rest of the drive, and then increase the inode ratio.. which is
kind of cheating!!

But doing it in one step/process.. cant figure it out!



Thanks!!


On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 5:35 PM, Paul W. Frields <sticks...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 02:31:03PM -0400, bruce wrote:
>> On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 2:18 PM, Steven Stern
>> <subscribed-li...@sterndata.com> wrote:
>> > On 10/14/2014 12:00 PM, bruce wrote:
>> >> hi.
>> >>
>> >> got a test drive, single partition
>> >>
>> >> i'm trying to figureout how to increase the inode count
>> >>
>> >> the drive is formatted, single root partition, fixed inode count
>> >>
>> >> trying to figure out how to increase the inode count
>> >>
>> >> i can do that/increase the inode if i have a partition, and i
>> >> unmount,reformat/ use -T news to increase the inode ratio, etc..
>> >>
>> >> but I can't figure out how to accomplish this on a single drive/root 
>> >> partition
>> >>
>> > Boot off a live CD/DVD?
>> >
>> and how does booting off a separate device allow you to change the
>> root partition /dev/sda inode count?????
>>
>>
>> you still have to then format the dev/sda drive, partition it, place
>> the os on it, but you're back in the same place!
>>
>> unless there's a way to use the os install gui, to somehow increase
>> the inode count at this step.. and there might be if you do a post on
>> the kickstart, but I haven't found any step by step process on how to
>> accomplish this..
>>
>> thanks
>
> Typically needing more inodes means that you are using the drive to
> store many small files.  Typically this has to be planned into your
> file systems when you create them.  The ext3/ext4 file system IIRC
> doesn't let you change number of inodes once the file system has been
> laid down.  A file system like XFS might be more useful for your case
> storing many small files since it manages inodes in a different way.
>
>
> --
> Paul W. Frields                                http://paul.frields.org/
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