If you run out of disk space on the parity drives the last added data files will need to be removed from the data disk which is requiring more than available parity disk space. I was under the impression that shouldn't happen. Am I wrong? Should I set different quotas / reserved space on these drives to avoid that? I'm assuming that you either have LOTS of tiny data files or that data1 has been closer to full at some earlier point in time. Data1 did used to be almost completely full, and I deleted...
If you run out of disk space on the parity drives the last added data files will need to be removed from the data disk which is requiring more than available parity disk space. I was under the impression that shouldn't happen. Am I wrong? Should I set different quotas / reserved space on these drives to avoid that? I'm assuming that you either have LOTS of tiny data files or that data1 has been closer to full at some earlier point in time. Data1 did used to be almost completely full. What does "LOTS"...
I've read up on some previous similar topics and I'm unsure what my situation is. Here's the relevant parts of df: $ df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on /dev/label/disk2 3.5T 3.2T 66G 98% /stor/data1 /dev/label/disk3 3.5T 1.1T 2.1T 34% /stor/data2 /dev/label/disk5 3.5T 66G 3.2T 2% /stor/data3 /dev/label/disk1 3.5T 3.2T 218M 100% /stor/parity1 /dev/label/disk4 3.5T 3.2T 218M 100% /stor/parity2 The drives are all identical. There are content files on each data drive and not on the...
Whenever I run SnapRAID I get the message that UUID is unsupported for my disks:...
Reporting security issues?