On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 03:16:06AM +0200, Pavel Machek wrote: > Hi! > > > 3) Does that mean that you shouldn't use ext3 on RAID drives? Of > > course not! First of all, Ext3 still saves you against kernel panics > > and hangs caused by device driver bugs or other kernel hangs. You > > will lose less data, and avoid needing to run a long and painful fsck > > after a forced reboot, compared to if you used ext2. You are making > > Actually... ext3 + MD RAID5 will still have a problem on kernel > panic. MD RAID5 is implemented in software, so if kernel panics, you > can still get inconsistent data in your array. Only if the MD RAID array is running in degraded mode (and again, if the system is in this state for a long time, the bug is in the system administrator). And even then, it depends on how the kernel dies. If the system hangs due to some deadlock, or we get an OOPS that kills a process while still holding some locks, and that leads to a deadlock, it's likely the low-level MD driver can still complete the stripe write, and no data will be lost. If the kernel ties itself in knots due to running out of memory, and the OOM handler is invoked, someone hitting the reset button to force a reboot will also be fine. If the RAID array is degraded, and we get an oops in interrupt handler, such that the system is immediately halted --- then yes, data could get lost. But there are many system crashes where the software RAID's ability to complete a stripe write would not be compromised. - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html