Hi Jaco,
On Thu 24-05-18 15:52:50, Jaco Kroon wrote:
To confirm, this would prevent you from resizing the filesystem completely and put a limit on the max size.
Yes, but the limit was already there. There was just an off-by-one error in the computation... So your filesystem was currently limited to 64TB but with a fixed test it would be limited to 64TB - 128MB.
Would another approach possibly be to make the additional blocks available, but without allocating additional inodes by way of flex groups?
In other words, accept the resize below, but then lower down in the same function where flex groups gets added, only add until the overflow would occur. Or make it overflow once, set number of inodes to 2^32-1 and then stop adding more? In my (and I'm betting most use-cases) this would en up wasting 1 potential inode.
So I don't think this is worth the complexity just to go up from 64TB-128MB to 64TB. It would be reasonably doable and maybe worth it to allow filesystems to grow arbitrarily by making groups that would overflow the s_inodes_count limit just not have any inodes. But it would not be completely trivial as there's quite some code (especially in e2fsprogs) assuming that every group has the same amount of inodes and now we'd have to teach all that code that there can be groups without inodes. So someone would have to be dedicated enough to implement and test this. OTOH the code is not *that* involved so if you wanted to try that, please go ahead.
Honza