On Tue, Jul 31, 2018 at 02:35:42PM +0200, Zdenek Kabelac wrote: > If you monitor amount of free space for data AND for metadata in thin-pool > yourself you can keep easily threshold == 100. Understood. Two things: 1) basically threshold < 100 allows you to hit the limit, have LVM pause IO, allocate more blocks, and resize the filesystem for you. However, if you're not monitoring this, it's ultimately just the same as having threshold = 100 and hoping that you won't hit the limit, except that you're adding the complexity of resizes in the mix. Correct? 2) I wasn't quite clear on what metadata was used for, and I let vgcreate pick a default amount for me. Am I correct that it basically tracks block usage and maybe LVM snapshots that I'm not going to use, and that therefore if I don't resize my LV, I don't really have to worry about metadata running out? > Just don't forget when you upsize 'data' - you should also typically > extend also metadata - it's not uncommon issue user start with small > 'data' & 'metadata' LV with thin-pool - then continue to only extend > thin-pool 'data' volume and ignore/forget about metadata completely > and hit the full metadata device - which can lead to many troubles > (hitting full dataLV is normally not a big deal). Thanks for the warning. Given that I started with the maximum size and don't plain on ever extending (to be fair, I can't), I should be ok there, correct? Thanks, Marc -- "A mouse is a device used to point at the xterm you want to type in" - A.S.R. Microsoft is to operating systems .... .... what McDonalds is to gourmet cooking Home page: http://marc.merlins.org/ | PGP 7F55D5F27AAF9D08 _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/