Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2006 14:25:37 +0200 From: Fluffles <etc@fluffles.net> To: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org> Cc: freebsd-fs@FreeBSD.org, freebsd-geom@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: Updated gjournal patches [20061024]. Message-ID: <4541FAC1.1000601@fluffles.net> In-Reply-To: <20061024152308.GG75746@garage.freebsd.pl> References: <20061024152308.GG75746@garage.freebsd.pl>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Hi Pawel, I've tried your recent (20061024) gjournal patches on my test fileserver, which is an amd64 FreeBSD7 box with 8 SATA disks. I'm currently using graid5 on it, with success. I've also tried using gjournal, but with little success. The compilation/installation and creation of the journal device goes as planned, but i get kernel panics not long after i start writing to it. A "newfs -b 65536 /dev/raid5/sophia.journal" quickly panicked the system. After that i tried without the -b parameter; that appeared to work but not long after i got a panic again; same panic as before. Please look at the screenshot i made of the panic message: http://dev.fluffles.net/images/gjournal-panic1.png Do you know what could be causing the panic? The panic message itself is not very explanatory. ;-) Perhaps gjournal doesn't play nice with graid5? I haven't tried it on a single disk, yet. Also i have a question about it's performance. You mentioned earlier that writing big files takes about twice as long with gjournal, i wonder if this is inherit to journaling itself or due to the current implementation. Windows' journaling NTFS, for example, isn't slower than FAT32 with big files if i remember correctly. What major differences in the journaling process causes this? Also, in your earlier post you explained the advantages of a journal with regard to significantly reduces fsck times at boot. But my major concern is dataloss: on my testserver i've had many kernel panics/freezes due to the experimental graid5 module being tested by Arne. This has resulted in the system not being able to boot because the ad0s2a (read: a!) partition has lost files. And it won't be the first time a lockup or power failure caused dataloss on my systems. That's why i want to use gjournal: to protect from dataloss. Am i correct in my assumption that gjournal addresses my needs in this regard? Greetings, Veronica
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?4541FAC1.1000601>