RE: [CentOS] XFS and CentOS 4.3

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Hi all,

I’m  looking  turkish knowledge for centos…

anybody help me please

thank you very much

 

 

 

Kemal Bozdağ

Devri Alem Turizm Yatırım Danışmanlık A.Ş.

Cumhuriyet Cad. No 217 Harbiye 34373 İSTANBUL

T 0212 444 83 83    D 0212 368 17 03   F 0212 368 17 19

www.devrialem.com

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Johnny Hughes
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2006 12:18 PM
To: CentOS ML
Subject: Re: [CentOS] XFS and CentOS 4.3

 

On Tue, 2006-08-15 at 14:13 +1000, Mark Strong wrote:

> Hi All, after looking around for info on XFS(the filesystem) and its use

> on CentOS and/or RHEL 4.  There seems to be a lot of noise about 4K

> Stacks (especially on linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx).

>

> So what is the best way to get XFS working with CentOS 4.3 ? And not

> have something like this happening.

>

> A quote from the xfs list at sgi

> >On Tue, 18 Jul 2006 at 10:29am, Andrew Elwell wrote

> >

>         >using the 2.6.9-34 centosplus SMP kernel (3GHz P4 with

>         >hyperthreading enabled)

>         >

>         >what we normally (~once a day) is simply

>         >

>         >do_IRQ: stack overflow: 416

>         >[<c0107a27>]

>

> >You don't want to use the XFS in the centosplus kernel. It has major

> >known issues with 4K stacks (leading to overflows). Use the

> >kernel-module-xfs (or somesuch) RPM instead, and you should have better

> >luck.

>

> Do I need a kernel with 8K stacks?

>

> and is this

>

> http://dev.centos.org/centos/4/testing/i386/RPMS/kernel-module-xfs-2.6.9-34.ELsmp-0.1-3.i686.rpm

>

> the "kernel-module-xfs" RPM he was talking about (or equivalent for

> `uname -r` equals 2.6.9-34.ELsmp).

>

>

> Regards

> Mark Strong

 

Personally, I would not use xfs on Linux ... maybe take a look here:

 

http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20060814

 

And see what several debain devel's say about XFS.

 

RedHat says it is not stable enough to use in RHEL.

 

I don't think everyone can be wrong.

 

If you really want to use it, you can use the module you referenced

above and our kernel.  The standard RHEL kernel will not compile w/

anything except 4k stacks (that is how the CentOS kernel is released

too) ... so if you want to do that, you'll need to figure it out.

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