Kenneth Jacker <k...@be.cs.appstate.edu> wrote: > I am buying two new SATA hard drives: 1TB and 2TB.
> I'd like to use the 2TB unit for backups (typical Linux directories > and files) ... with just a single file system (ext4 most likely). > Will 'mkfs' create "enough" inodes? Or, would it be better to, say, > split the 2TB into four 500GB file systems. Or, some other approach? I have in my 15 years as Linux admin only run out if inodes in two cases: a) INN2 usenet server with traditional spool which contained a metric sh*t ton of very very small files. Needed to recreate the filesystem with a bytes-per-inode size of 1024. b) squid2 spool directory. Also a motherlode of very small files. In all other cases the defaults of mke2fs were sane and no need for further tuning was needed. Just look at the inode/byte ratio of the filesystems you want to backup. Your destination will show the same ratio. And if you really want to be on the safe side: use XFS. Grüße, Sven. -- Sigmentation fault. Core dumped. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/7amik4iat...@mids.svenhartge.de