On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 4:56 AM, Swâmi Petaramesh <sw...@petaramesh.org> wrote: > After having received strong advice from the people in this list to > upgrade my kernel to the latest one, I have installed 3.8.0-14-generic > #24-Ubuntu SMP x86_64 on several (4) machines. > > In the hope of improving systems speed I had also removed all snapshots > then defragged the FSes - the snapshots have been recreated since, as I > use the excellent SuSE "Snapper" tool. > > But well, all 4 machines are still slow like hell. All of them are used > for quite basic daily tasks - web browsing, email, typical LibreOffice > tasks, nothing very mysterious there, no specific heavy DB work. > > All machines have 64-bits Linuxes (either Ubuntu 12.10 or 13.04ß), with > decent amounts of RAM - 2 GB to 4 GB - and disks filled less than 75% > > With such a setup, I would expect any decent filesystem to deliver > excellent performance. Still, all of my machines are slow like hell and > I'm most of the time in mode « Working my patience while waiting for the > HD LED to go off ». > > I haven't noticed any real-life noticeable improvement upgrading the > kernels from 3.5.x to 3.8.x > > So I'm wondering...
I must say after having used BTRFS for quite some time on many different desktop systems that this pretty much summaries my though of BTRFS used on a desktop system. I have been using it on my root filesystem for 5 consecutive systems and all of them were I/O bound most of the time after 2 months of normal usage with or *without* snapshots. Defragging or rebalancing doesn't help, growing leaf size helps push back the problem, but it eventually come back. The only way to get around the problem is to re-format the drive and restore from backups. I'm pretty sure I toasted 2 SSDs because of BTRFS, one in 4 months, the other in 6 months. 80 GB SSDs, I switched this system to NILFS2 for now, which isn't I/O bound and doesn't kill flash drives. A bigger system that I administer has 14 TB worth of data and has constant loads of 6 to 8 (4 CPUs), mostly because of I/O wait just because it unzips a file. This system never had a snapshot. On the system I'm writing, watching a YouTube video will hang one second every 30 seconds because flash player writes the video to /tmp. I submitted some backtrace but lost hope, I used kernel from 3.0 to 3.9-rc4 with the FS, features are great, it is great for a file server, but for desktop, it is really hard to use as root or /home because of this issue. Is there any data I can submit to help enhance performance on a desktop system? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html