On Wednesday 21 March 2007 02:14am, Ahmed Kamal wrote:
Coming from a systems administration background, I was very surprised
to
find out that fedora (well Linux actually) doesn't have a per directory
quota. It is very common and needed IMHO to have a quota per directory, as
the directory basically represents a project some people are working on.
One would want to make sure that a certain project would not consume all
disk space. Only XFS seemed to have per "project" quota (I even think the
Linux implementation doesn't have that!)
Linux "only" has per-filesystem quota support. You're asking for what's
called "tree quotas" support.
Is there any technical reason why ext3 does not offer such
functionality,
AIUI, tree quota implementations found in commercial UNIX systems have a very
large impact on filesystem performance. The per-filesystem quotas have very
little impact on performance.
or has it just not been done?
I've been told that there is development work underway (for several years now)
to create a tree quotas implementation for Linux, but that those doing the
work are only going to release it if they can do it without the massive
performance overhead typicall of the commercial UNIX implementations.
Is anyone aware of any patches to add such
functionality?
AFAIK (and with just a quick Google search), there are no tree quotas
implementations for Linux that are "off the ground" and running yet.
--
Lamont Peterson <lamont(a)gurulabs.com>
Senior Instructor
Guru Labs, L.C. [
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