I can't see that as being an issue. On the most basic level it is as any other file system, you format and mount. Other than that support would be on the ocfs or fedora mailing lists as usual.On Tue, 2007-03-20 at 17:09 +0900, Naoki wrote:OCFS2 made it into the mainstream kernel a while ago. But while Debian and SUSE ship OCFS2 tools, FC does not. Is this simply a case of nobody submitting them, or is there a licenseissue (nah, it's GPL) ?perhaps you need somebody with a bit of knowledge about and willing to support that file system?
If the answer is the former then is there time to add them before FC7 ?Nope, today is feature freeze.
Which ends on the 29th. That raises a question though, as it would be essentially the same as adding something to 'extras', we're not talking about a major (or minor) feature change or an API alteration. Just adding some open tools for an already existing feature.
If this was the FC6 cycle it could probably just slip into extras unnoticed, so how would it work under the merge? Add it to the extras wish list or just submit it?
I stand corrected! It "was" the only one in the kernel. But I'd still not rather use GFS and have been waiting for OCFS2 tools to appear in FC for over a year. Yes I know one can download the tools from the oracle site but when we ship tools for most (all?) other file systems (e2fsprogs & ntfsprogs as expected, xfsprogs, hfsplus-tools, plus fuse and other randomness) it hardly seems logical to just leave it out.It's the only main line clustered file system and I'd like to run it through the gauntlet with my favourite OS.Not true, GFS2 is in the kernel as well: http://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_2_6_19 Its tools are included in Fedora.
If it isn't already I would expect standard policy would be to ship the utilities package for any standard, enabled, file system ?