Re: btrfs and ECC RAM

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 6:23 PM, Ian Hinder <ian.hinder@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have been reading a lot of articles online about the dangers of using ZFS with non-ECC RAM.  Specifically, the fact that when good data is read from disk and compared with its checksum, a RAM error can cause the read data to be incorrect, causing a checksum failure, and the bad data might now be written back to the disk in an attempt to correct it, corrupting it in the process.  This would be exacerbated by a scrub, which could run through all your data and potentially corrupt it.  There is a strong current of opinion that using ZFS without ECC RAM is "suicide for your data".

That sounds entirely silly:  a scrub will only write data to the disk
that has actually passed a checksum. In order for that to corrupt
something on disk, you'd have to have a perfect storm of correct and
corrupt reads, and in every such case thta I can think of, you'd be
worse off without checksums than if you had them.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html




[Index of Archives]     [Linux Filesystem Development]     [Linux NFS]     [Linux NILFS]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux