I'm running Debian, specifically 'woody', and I'm trying to compile using Python 2.3.3. I'll try my luck with the Python guys, as well, but if someone else knows what's going on - I'd be most appreciative! :)
Which linux kernel, glibc, and filesystem do you have? I'm not a linux expert, but I know some old linux kernels, c libraries, and ext2 don't have large file support. Perhaps an linux kernel upgrade will solve it. You could also tried to create a file greater than 2 Gb from the unix shell: dd if=/dev/zero of=big_file_test bs=1024 count=2600000 If everything goes well, you will see a 2.5Gb file called "big_file_test". On the contrary, you will see an error, which means that your debian really doesn't support large files. Indeed you will need to upgrade. Regards, Josef
Hello Josef! Sorry it's taken me so long to get back to you: Uname -a reports: Linux server 2.2.20-idepci #1 Sat Apr 20 12:45:19 EST 2002 i686 unknown But I'm not sure how to delve the info on my glibc version, and type of filesystem (sorry, it's been a while).. Can you give me any information on how to find this out? Thanks! -e- -----Original Message----- From: zope-bounces@zope.org [mailto:zope-bounces@zope.org] On Behalf Of Josef Meile Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2004 2:13 PM To: zope@zope.org Subject: [Zope] Re: Largefile support error
I'm running Debian, specifically 'woody', and I'm trying to compile using Python 2.3.3. I'll try my luck with the Python guys, as well, but if someone else knows what's going on - I'd be most appreciative! :)
Which linux kernel, glibc, and filesystem do you have? I'm not a linux expert, but I know some old linux kernels, c libraries, and ext2 don't have large file support. Perhaps an linux kernel upgrade will solve it. You could also tried to create a file greater than 2 Gb from the unix shell: dd if=/dev/zero of=big_file_test bs=1024 count=2600000 If everything goes well, you will see a 2.5Gb file called "big_file_test". On the contrary, you will see an error, which means that your debian really doesn't support large files. Indeed you will need to upgrade. Regards, Josef _______________________________________________ Zope maillist - Zope@zope.org http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev )
Hmmm.. that's an fairly old Linux kernel version (my best guess is ~Nov. 2001?). I suspect your system doesn't do large files. Did you try to do the "dd" command that Josef suggested to see if you were able to create large files at all? If you can't, I think you'll need to upgrade your Linux kernel/glibc to "something" that can handle it. I dimly remember that this was a murky task at the time with many steps and little hard information about which kernel version and/or glibc versions to upgrade to, and little information about whether some utilities needed to be recompiled to handle large files. It's probably easier to just upgrade to a later distribution revision and not try to upgrade "in-place". On Thu, 2004-06-03 at 16:23, Eddie Parker wrote:
Hello Josef!
Sorry it's taken me so long to get back to you:
Uname -a reports:
Linux server 2.2.20-idepci #1 Sat Apr 20 12:45:19 EST 2002 i686 unknown
But I'm not sure how to delve the info on my glibc version, and type of filesystem (sorry, it's been a while).. Can you give me any information on how to find this out?
Thanks!
-e-
-----Original Message----- From: zope-bounces@zope.org [mailto:zope-bounces@zope.org] On Behalf Of Josef Meile Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2004 2:13 PM To: zope@zope.org Subject: [Zope] Re: Largefile support error
I'm running Debian, specifically 'woody', and I'm trying to compile using Python 2.3.3. I'll try my luck with the Python guys, as well, but if someone else knows what's going on - I'd be most appreciative! :)
Which linux kernel, glibc, and filesystem do you have? I'm not a linux expert, but I know some old linux kernels, c libraries, and ext2 don't have large file support. Perhaps an linux kernel upgrade will solve it.
You could also tried to create a file greater than 2 Gb from the unix shell:
dd if=/dev/zero of=big_file_test bs=1024 count=2600000
If everything goes well, you will see a 2.5Gb file called "big_file_test". On the contrary, you will see an error, which means that your debian really doesn't support large files. Indeed you will need to upgrade.
Regards, Josef
_______________________________________________ Zope maillist - Zope@zope.org http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev )
_______________________________________________ Zope maillist - Zope@zope.org http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope ** No cross posts or HTML encoding! ** (Related lists - http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce http://mail.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev )
Uname -a reports:
Linux server 2.2.20-idepci #1 Sat Apr 20 12:45:19 EST 2002 i686 unknown I had a problem with large file support on a 2.4.10 kernel (suse), so I guess you have a dinosaur there :-)
Upgrade your kernel to 2.4.22 or higher, then it should work. Try also the command I told you, then you will also see if it is a kernel fault.
But I'm not sure how to delve the info on my glibc version, and type of filesystem (sorry, it's been a while).. Can you give me any information on how to find this out? I don't know how to do it on debian. I use gentoo.
Thanks! Your welcome
participants (3)
-
Chris McDonough -
Eddie Parker -
Josef Meile