disk crashes provoked by tahoe-lafs?
Greg Troxel
gdt at ir.bbn.com
Tue Apr 15 15:13:24 UTC 2014
Paul Rabahy <prabahy at gmail.com> writes:
> I don't care what you do, if a program operating in userspace can kill a
> disk, I would call that a hardware problem. Even if the hardware didn't
> want to claim the problem then the filesystem should be responsible for it.
I see your point, and I think it's 90% valid but a bit extreme. A
user-space process in a tight loop doing create/fsync/unlink or
something like that could cause trouble. There are lots of other
systems running similar software but without tahoe, and I'm not seeing
nearly as many failures on them - hence my query.
> My honest guess is that you were just hit with a string of bad luck. Were
> the drives that failed the same make/model/manufacture date?
No, not at all the same. One was a Seagate 1T, ST1000DM03. One was a
2T WD Elements (in a box, new in 2010). One was a hitachi 500G notebook
drive HTS545050B9A300 (2.5", mounted in a net5501). And one a Seagate
750G ST3750528AS.
The bad luck theory is quite plausible, and I put considerable weight on
it. I was really asking if anyone else had experiences that
corroborated the theory.
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