T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2615.1 | | DUCATI::LASTOVICA | Is it possible to be totally partial? | Wed Apr 09 1997 14:58 | 4 |
| /EXTEND=3D20000 would seem to be illegal. Perhaps it
is /EXTEND=20000? In any case, I'm not sure what it should
do, but it should not 'hang'. Can you reproduce the
behaviour in-house?
|
2615.2 | | M5::JAKUHN | [email protected] | Wed Apr 09 1997 17:43 | 1 |
| sorry, it's /extend=20000
|
2615.3 | | ORAREP::AUSS::GARSON | DECcharity Program Office | Wed Apr 09 1997 19:36 | 6 |
| re .1
>/EXTEND=3D20000 would seem to be illegal. Perhaps it
^^^
Just the usual (tedious) quoted-printable mail encoding.
|
2615.4 | I wanted him to think about it! :-) | hotrdb.us.oracle.com::LASTOVICA | Can you be a closet claustrophobic? | Thu Apr 10 1997 01:20 | 4 |
| > Just the usual (tedious) quoted-printable mail encoding.
d'on worry - I knew that. It was just a minor prelude to asking
Jay to reproduce the problem in-house.
|
2615.5 | Very old problem | ukvms3.uk.oracle.com::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Thu Apr 10 1997 05:29 | 12 |
| If you use a very large extent and there isn't enough space available
on the disk, your process can appear to hang. What happens is that if
RMS can not allocate the full extent, it drops back to allocating the
space in very small units (disk cluster size IIRC). This can take 100
times longer than normal. The work that is being done is not charged
against your process by VMS so it appears to hang, but if you wait long
enough it will complete (possibly with an error if there is really not
enough space).
I tested this using DBMS V3.?, but I doubt that it has changed.
Peter
|
2615.6 | thanks && 1 more question...i hope | M5::JAKUHN | [email protected] | Fri Apr 11 1997 16:04 | 4 |
| thank you very much Peter. I really appreciate the explanation.
This is not really a "bug" kinda thing, its just "how it works"?
jay
|
2615.7 | | ukvms3.uk.oracle.com::PJACKSON | Oracle UK Rdb Support | Mon Apr 14 1997 06:24 | 6 |
| > This is not really a "bug" kinda thing, its just "how it works"?
Well, I found it in the VMS (V4) documentation about how file
extents are done.
Peter
|