On 2015-08-26 08:04, MASAKI Yuhsuke wrote:
If you want the latest kernel and userspace, then Arch is definitely one of the two best options, the other being Gentoo. For someone who is used to Manjaro or CentOS, Arch will be a lot easier to adapt to than Gentoo however. Both Gentoo and Arch work very well for server systems, and make it a lot easier to keep up to date on security patches and bugfixes than most of the other popular distributions.Hi Duncan, thank you for your reply. I understood it is guessed from development between 3.10 and 4.1. I will try to replace CentOS 7 Receiver with Manjaro (same as sender) and sync. I will report the result here anyway. If it doesn't work, I report it Kernel BTS. I searched distro for server use with later kernel. But I couldn't find. I wonder Arch Linux is better if I desire btrfs stability.
I actually just recently tested send/recieve over the network myself using ssh (along the lines of 'btrfs send snapshot | ssh user@remotehost btrfs recieve /target'), and only about 1 out of 3 attempts actually worked. At the time, I was on kernel 4.0. I'm thinking that something about recieve is timing dependent, as I got lower success rates as I artificially increased the network latency.After on previous post, it completed on 8th try with nc and piped btrfs receive. But the unstability make me nervous. I hope that latest kernel makes good.
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