From: Shailendra Tripathi <stripathi@agami.com>
To: Chris Hane <chrishane@gmail.com>
Cc: xfs@oss.sgi.com
Subject: Re: XFS and 3.2TB Partition
Date: Fri, 01 Sep 2006 02:11:58 +0530 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <44F74996.8000209@agami.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <44F714F2.7050502@gmail.com>
Hi Chris,
>
> I am trying to create a 3.2TB partition on my Raid 5. Is there a
> document that could help?
You can get generic information on partitions and how to create them at
http://www.faqs.org/docs/Linux-mini/Partition.html
> I have a 3ware 9500 controller and 8 *500GB sata drives configured
> into a single RAID 5 array.
> I am running linux 2.6.16 with the 3ware drivers compiled into the
> kernel.
>
> I've tried a couple of different means to create the partition and
> format the file system with xfs without success (or confidence that I
> haven't done something wrong).
>
> 1. FDISK
>
> I've tried fdisk on the array to create the partition; but it forces
> me enter the number of cylinders before letting me create the
> partition. I enter the largest number of cylinders since I'm not sure
> how to calculate the correct cylinder number across an 8 disk RAID 5
> array.
>
> I then create the partition starting at 0 (or whatever the default
> was) and ending at 3500GB.
>
> Once the partition is created this way, I can mkfs.xfs; but I'm a
> little hesitant to use this since I input and arbitrary cylinder number.
>
> Thoughts on what to use for the correct cylinder count with fdisk?
>
It is not actually arbitrary. There are various options to create a
partition - can specify the size, sectors or cylinders. fdisk -l
/dev/<device> can hopefully give you details about the size of the disk,
cylinders etc. Now, it is upto to you as to how many partiotions you
want to create and use.
> 2. PARTED
>
> I've tried to use parted without any success. Here is what I've tried
> and the errors I get.
>
> > parted
> parted> mklabel gpt
> parted> mkpart primary 0 3500GB
> parted> quit
>
> ok - the partition now exists. If I use ext2 everything works ok.
>
> however, when I run
>
> > mkfs.xfs /dev/sda1
>
> the file system is formated but is truncated to to 2TB.
XFS can limit the FS size this way when AG count is just 2. xfs_info
<mnt_point> will list the details about the number of AG count. XFS can
support about 1 TB in one AG. By default, it calculates the agcount
automatically unless you force them. Your command line option does not
suggest this.
The 2 TB limit might be coming, perhaps, because parted uses 4 byte
addresses data structures. This way, it can support maximum of 2^32
sectors of 512 size ~ 41 bits ~ 2TB. It is my guess, though.
-shailendra
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-08-31 20:43 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-08-31 16:57 XFS and 3.2TB Partition Chris Hane
2006-08-31 19:37 ` Eric Sandeen
2006-08-31 20:41 ` Shailendra Tripathi [this message]
2006-08-31 20:45 ` Russell Cattelan
2006-09-01 6:36 ` Rainer Krienke
2006-09-01 16:12 ` Chris Hane
2006-09-01 8:40 ` Evan Fraser
2006-09-01 17:14 ` Peter Grandi
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