On Friday 01 Jul 2005 15:05, Al Boldi wrote:
> Jens Axboe wrote: {
>
> On Fri, Jul 01 2005, David Masover wrote:
> > Chris Wedgwood wrote:
> > >On Wed, Jun 29, 2005 at 07:53:09AM +0300, Al Boldi wrote:
> > >>What I found were 4 things in the dest dir:
> > >>1. Missing Dirs,Files. That's OK.
> > >>2. Files of size 0. That's acceptable.
> > >>3. Corrupted Files. That's unacceptable.
> > >>4. Corrupted Files with original fingerprint. That's ABSOLUTELY
> > >>unacceptable.
> > >
> > >disk usually default to caching these days and can lose data as a
> > >result, disable that
> >
> > Not always possible. Some disks lie and leave caching on anyway.
>
> And the same (and others) disks will not honor a flush anyways.
> Moral of that story - avoid bad hardware.
> }
>
> 1. Sync is not the issue. The issue is whether a journaled FS can detect
> corrupted files and flag them after a power-blackout!
> 2. Moral of the story is: What's ext3 doing the others aren't?
>
I agree, I've used XFS for about three years on Linux now, and whilst I love
the performance and self-repair attributes of the filesystem, I do think it
leaves a lot to be desired when it comes to file corruption.
In my experience, using a standard XFS log/volume setup on the same physical,
cheap IDE HD, any files open at the time as a power down or hardware lockup
end up being filled either with zeros, or garbage.
However, I'd far rather lose a few files once in a blue moon than have to sit
through 10 minute fsck's every time the kernel crashes or I kick out the
plugs.
--
Cheers,
Alistair.
personal: alistair()devzero!co!uk
university: s0348365()sms!ed!ac!uk
student: CS/CSim Undergraduate
contact: 1F2 55 South Clerk Street,
Edinburgh. EH8 9PP.
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