Something that I've done in the past for two 20G RAIDs using ext2 is to use mke2fs' "-N" option. IIRC, I used a -N of ~150,000, so I guess the bytes-to-inode ratio was ~143,165. Given that the average size of files today (a .DOC containing "hello, world" is what, a Meg nowadays? :) ) seems to be on the increase, I don't think that 143,165 bytes is entirely unreasonable. IIRC, using mke2fs defaults had created something like ~5,000,000 inodes. Anyway, after this change, running e2fsck went from ~40 minutes to something like ~5 minutes. If you have a filesystem with quite a bit of data on it, you can get an idea of your own data's "real world" bytes-to-inode ratio using "df -k", "df -i", and "dc". After you buy that fat, shiny new disk, you can use this "real world" ratio (with some padding, of course; and possibly combine it with a larger blocksize) to optimize the filesystems you're creating on the new disk. Also for large filesystems, keep the "-m" (reserved blocks percentage) value in mind. The default is 5%. In JLF's 1T case, if he went with the default (yeah, like that will EVER happen), ~54,975,581,389 bytes of disk space would be reserved for exclusive use by the root user. D * On Tue, Nov 14, 2000 at 10:15:50PM -0700, Kevin Buettner wrote: > On Nov 14, 10:02pm, Don Harrop wrote: > > > I've been doing some Linux on some bigger HD's lately. Seems like the > > largest partition ext2 can support is 8gigs. Am I stuck with this or is > > there a trick to creating a larger partition that I don't know about? Is > > there a way to connect two drives together as one logical partition? I > > wan't to create the biggest partition I can in Linux with the utilities > > that come with the a standard Linux distro. > > I have a 17GB ext2 partition on one of my drives. ext2 can go even > larger, but I'm not sure it's worth it due to extremely long fsck > times. > > My guess is that you just need a newer version of lilo. > > Kevin > > ________________________________________________ > See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > > Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss