:D Maybe this is more useful. [root at cheese25 ~]# yum list installed | grep gluster glusterfs.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs glusterfs-fuse.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs glusterfs-server.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs glusterfs-swift.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift glusterfs-swift-account.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift glusterfs-swift-container.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift glusterfs-swift-object.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift glusterfs-swift-plugin.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift glusterfs-swift-proxy.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift On Nov 29, 2012, at 9:03 PM, Andrew Holway wrote: > Hi, > > glusterfs.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-fuse.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-server.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-swift.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs-swift-account.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs-swift-container.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs-swift-object.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs-swift-plugin.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs-swift-proxy.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 @epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs.i686 3.2.7-1.el6 epel > glusterfs-debuginfo.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-devel.i686 3.2.7-1.el6 epel > glusterfs-devel.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-geo-replication.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-rdma.x86_64 3.3.1-3.el6 epel-glusterfs > glusterfs-swift-doc.noarch 3.3.1-3.el6 epel-glusterfs-swift > glusterfs-vim.x86_64 3.2.7-1.el6 epel > > Ta, > > Andrew > > On Nov 29, 2012, at 8:52 PM, Peter Portante wrote: > >> Hi Andrew, >> >> What version of Gluster are you using? >> >> -peter >> >> >> ----- Original Message ----- >>> From: "Andrew Holway" <a.holway at syseleven.de> >>> To: gluster-users at gluster.org >>> Cc: kaleb at keithley.org >>> Sent: Thursday, November 29, 2012 1:02:15 PM >>> Subject: Re: Gluster swift >>> >>> In addition, >>> >>> Requests to view the contents of containers that have been filled in >>> this manner fail. >>> >>> [root at cheese25 free]# ls -l | wc >>> 3654 32879 193695 >>> [root at cheese25 free]# >>> >>> [root at bright60 lots_of_little_files]# curl --verbose -H >>> 'X-Auth-Token: AUTH_tk289d8ebe3ff44c97a9721970a4251f02' >>> https://cheese25:443/v1/AUTH_gv0/free/ -k >>> * About to connect() to cheese25 port 443 (#0) >>> * Trying 10.141.105.25... connected >>> * Connected to cheese25 (10.141.105.25) port 443 (#0) >>> * Initializing NSS with certpath: sql:/etc/pki/nssdb >>> * warning: ignoring value of ssl.verifyhost >>> * skipping SSL peer certificate verification >>> * SSL connection using TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA >>> * Server certificate: >>> * subject: CN=cheese25,O=Default Company Ltd,L=Default City,C=XX >>> * start date: Nov 29 16:27:49 2012 GMT >>> * expire date: Dec 29 16:27:49 2012 GMT >>> * common name: cheese25 >>> * issuer: CN=cheese25,O=Default Company Ltd,L=Default City,C=XX >>>> GET /v1/AUTH_gv0/free/ HTTP/1.1 >>>> User-Agent: curl/7.19.7 (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.19.7 >>>> NSS/3.13.1.0 zlib/1.2.3 libidn/1.18 libssh2/1.2.2 >>>> Host: cheese25 >>>> Accept: */* >>>> X-Auth-Token: AUTH_tk289d8ebe3ff44c97a9721970a4251f02 >>>> >>> < HTTP/1.1 503 Internal Server Error >>> < Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 >>> < Content-Length: 0 >>> < Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2012 18:00:04 GMT >>> < >>> * Connection #0 to host cheese25 left intact >>> * Closing connection #0 >>> >>> But, non full volumes are ok :) >>> >>> [root at bright60 lots_of_little_files]# curl --verbose -H >>> 'X-Auth-Token: AUTH_tk289d8ebe3ff44c97a9721970a4251f02' >>> https://cheese25:443/v1/AUTH_gv0/stuff/ -k >>> * About to connect() to cheese25 port 443 (#0) >>> * Trying 10.141.105.25... connected >>> * Connected to cheese25 (10.141.105.25) port 443 (#0) >>> * Initializing NSS with certpath: sql:/etc/pki/nssdb >>> * warning: ignoring value of ssl.verifyhost >>> * skipping SSL peer certificate verification >>> * SSL connection using TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA >>> * Server certificate: >>> * subject: CN=cheese25,O=Default Company Ltd,L=Default City,C=XX >>> * start date: Nov 29 16:27:49 2012 GMT >>> * expire date: Dec 29 16:27:49 2012 GMT >>> * common name: cheese25 >>> * issuer: CN=cheese25,O=Default Company Ltd,L=Default City,C=XX >>>> GET /v1/AUTH_gv0/stuff/ HTTP/1.1 >>>> User-Agent: curl/7.19.7 (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.19.7 >>>> NSS/3.13.1.0 zlib/1.2.3 libidn/1.18 libssh2/1.2.2 >>>> Host: cheese25 >>>> Accept: */* >>>> X-Auth-Token: AUTH_tk289d8ebe3ff44c97a9721970a4251f02 >>>> >>> < HTTP/1.1 200 OK >>> < X-Container-Object-Count: 15 >>> < X-Container-Bytes-Used: 0 >>> < Accept-Ranges: bytes >>> < Content-Length: 84 >>> < Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 >>> < Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2012 18:00:49 GMT >>> < >>> a1 >>> a10 >>> a100 >>> a1000 >>> a10000 >>> a1001 >>> a1002 >>> a1003 >>> a1004 >>> a1005 >>> a1006 >>> a1007 >>> a1008 >>> a1009 >>> a101 >>> * Connection #0 to host cheese25 left intact >>> * Closing connection #0 >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Andrew >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Nov 29, 2012, at 6:38 PM, Andrew Holway wrote: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> Im mooperd on irc. >>>> >>>> After lots of swearing and learning I think I am getting the hang >>>> of it. Today, I created 10000 files and squirted them into UFO. >>>> >>>> for file in $(ls); do curl -X PUT -T $file -H 'X-Auth-Token: >>>> AUTH_tk289d8ebe3ff44c97a9721970a4251f02' >>>> https://cheese25:443/v1/AUTH_gv0/new_container/ -k; done >>>> >>>> It works perfectly until you get to about 3500 files....then. >>>> >>>> </body> >>>> </html><html> >>>> <head> >>>> <title>201 Created</title> >>>> </head> >>>> <body> >>>> <h1>201 Created</h1> >>>> <br /><br /> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> </body> >>>> </html><html> >>>> <head> >>>> <title>201 Created</title> >>>> </head> >>>> <body> >>>> <h1>201 Created</h1> >>>> <br /><br /> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> </body> >>>> </html><html> >>>> <head> >>>> <title>404 Not Found</title> >>>> </head> >>>> <body> >>>> <h1>404 Not Found</h1> >>>> The resource could not be found.<br /><br /> >>>> >>>> >>>> This seems to be a hard limit for the number of files in a dir. Any >>>> ideas? >>>> >>>> Thanks, >>>> >>>> Andrew >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Gluster-users mailing list >>> Gluster-users at gluster.org >>> http://supercolony.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users >>> > > > _______________________________________________ > Gluster-users mailing list > Gluster-users at gluster.org > http://supercolony.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users