Carlos Carvalho wrote:
I use reiser3 and xfs. reiser3 is very good with many small files. A
simple test shows interactively perceptible results: removing large
files is faster with xfs, removing large directories (ex. the kernel
tree) is faster with reiser3.
My current main concern about XFS
Moshe Yudkowsky schrieb:
Carlos Carvalho wrote:
I use reiser3 and xfs. reiser3 is very good with many small files. A
simple test shows interactively perceptible results: removing large
files is faster with xfs, removing large directories (ex. the kernel
tree) is faster with reiser3.
My
Moshe Yudkowsky wrote:
Carlos Carvalho wrote:
I use reiser3 and xfs. reiser3 is very good with many small files. A
simple test shows interactively perceptible results: removing large
files is faster with xfs, removing large directories (ex. the kernel
tree) is faster with reiser3.
My current
On Tue, Jan 22, 2008 at 05:34:14AM -0600, Moshe Yudkowsky wrote:
Carlos Carvalho wrote:
I use reiser3 and xfs. reiser3 is very good with many small files. A
simple test shows interactively perceptible results: removing large
files is faster with xfs, removing large directories (ex. the kernel
On Jan 20, 2008, at 2:18 PM, Bill Davidsen wrote:
One partitionable RAID-10, perhaps, then partition as needed. Read
the discussion here about performance of LVM and RAID. I personally
don't do LVM unless I know I will have to have great flexibility of
configuration and can give up
Moshe Yudkowsky ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote on 20 January 2008 21:19:
Thanks for the tips, and in particular:
Iustin Pop wrote:
- if you download torrents, fragmentation is a real problem, so use a
filesystem that knows how to preallocate space (XFS and maybe ext4;
for XFS use
Question: with the same number of physical drives, do I get better
performance with one large md-based drive, or do I get better
performance if I have several smaller md-based drives?
Situation: dual CPU, 4 drives (which I will set up as RAID-1 after being
terrorized by the anti-RAID-5
On Sun, Jan 20, 2008 at 02:24:46PM -0600, Moshe Yudkowsky wrote:
Question: with the same number of physical drives, do I get better
performance with one large md-based drive, or do I get better
performance if I have several smaller md-based drives?
No expert here, but my opinion:
- md
Moshe Yudkowsky wrote:
Question: with the same number of physical drives, do I get better
performance with one large md-based drive, or do I get better
performance if I have several smaller md-based drives?
Situation: dual CPU, 4 drives (which I will set up as RAID-1 after
being terrorized
Thanks for the tips, and in particular:
Iustin Pop wrote:
- if you download torrents, fragmentation is a real problem, so use a
filesystem that knows how to preallocate space (XFS and maybe ext4;
for XFS use xfs_io to set a bigger extend size for where you
download)
That's a
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