hmm, on Sun, Jun 03, 2012 at 01:39:18PM +0200, Tobias Ulmer said that
> > these must be some really nice disks :]
> > 
> > for example only a 200G slice (also 64k/8k) of music/film/picture
> > collection (not even full yet) on a notebook disk (5400 RPM) takes ages:
> > 
> > Filesystem     Size    Used   Avail Capacity iused   ifree  %iused  Mounted 
> > on
> > /dev/sd0d      217G    153G   63.5G    71%   44815 7197423     1%   /data
> > 
> > $ time sudo fsck -f /dev/sd0d
> > ** /dev/rsd0d
> > ** File system is already clean
> > ** Last Mounted on /data
> > ** Phase 1 - Check Blocks and Sizes
> > ** Phase 2 - Check Pathnames
> > ** Phase 3 - Check Connectivity
> > ** Phase 4 - Check Reference Counts
> > ** Phase 5 - Check Cyl groups
> > 44815 files, 20076091 used, 8329340 free (13748 frags, 1039449 blocks, 0.0% 
> > fragmentation)
> >     4m58.26s real     0m22.50s user     0m7.28s system

at 71% disk usage having 1% inode usage, would it be a logical
idea to radically slash the number of inodes, perhaps by 50%, even more?

if i had 50% of the current total inodes, would the fsck time
be halved?  for some reason it seemed logical that
checking free inodes will be much faster then used ones...

> This comes down to the FFS1 vs FFS2 difference. Newfs will select FFS2
> for bigger filesystems, reducing fsck times significantly at the expense
> of more efficient disk space allocation in FFS1.

by efficient disk space allocation you mean fragmentation?
are there any numbers comparing FFS1 to FFS2 in this regard?

would there be a perceptible (negative) effect of using FFS2 on slices
smaller than 1TB?

-f
-- 
experience is nothing but a lot of mistakes.

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