On Thu, Aug 23, 2007 at 01:56:17PM +0100, Daniel J Blueman wrote: > Hi Fengguang, > > On 23/08/07, James Courtier-Dutton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Daniel J Blueman wrote: > > > On 23 Aug, 07:00, Jan Engelhardt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >> On Aug 23 2007 01:01, Richard Ballantyne wrote: > > >> > > >>> What file system that is already in the linux kernel do people recommend > > >>> I use for my laptop that now contains a solid state disk? > > >>> > > >> If I had to choose, the list of options seems to be: > > >> > > >> - logfs > > >> [unmerged] > > >> > > >> - UBI layer with any fs you like > > >> [just a guess] > > >> > > >> - UDF in Spared Flavor (mkudffs --media-type=cdrw --utf8) > > >> [does not support ACLs/quotas] > > > > > > Isn't it that with modern rotational wear-levelling, re-writing hot > > > blocks many times is not an issue, as they are internally moved around > > > anyway? So, using a journalled filesystem such as ext3 is still good > > > (robustness and maturity in mind). Due to lack of write buffering, > > > perhaps a wandering log (journal) filesystem would be more suitable > > > though? I use ext3 on my >35MB/s compact flash filesystem. > > > > > > I can see there being advantage in selecting a filesystem which is > > > lower complexity due to no additional spatial optimisation complexity, > > > but those advantages do buy other efficiency (eg the Orlov allocator > > > reducing fragmentation, thus less overhead), right? > > > > > > Also, it would be natural to employ 'elevator=none', but perhaps there > > > is a small advantage in holding a group of flash blocks 'ready' (like > > > SDRAM pages being selected on-chip for lower bus access latency) - > > > however this no longer holds when logical->physical remapping is > > > performed, so perhaps it's better without an elevator. > > > > > > Clearly, benchmarks speak...but perhaps it would make sense to have > > > libata disable the elevator for the (compact) flash block device? > > > > > > Daniel > > > > Also, sector read ahead will actually have a performance impact on > > Flash, instead of speed things up with a spinning disc. > > For example, a request might read 128 sectors instead of the one > > requested at little or no extra performance impact for a spinning disc. > > For flash, reading 128 sectors instead of the one requested will have a > > noticeable performance impact. > > Spinning discs have high seek latency, low serial sector read latency > > and equal latency for read/write > > Flash has low seek latency, high serial sector read latency and longer > > write than read times.
A little bit of readahead will be helpful for flash memory. Its latency is low, but sure not zero. Asynchronous readahead will help to hide the latency. > I was having problem invoking the readahead logic on my compact flash > rootfs (ext3) with tweaking the RA with 'hdparm -a' from 8 to 1024 > blocks and some benchmarks (I forget which). > > Fengguang, what is your favourite benchmark for finding differences in > readahead values (running on eg ext3 on a flashdisk), with the current > RA semantics in mainline kernels (eg 2.6.23-rc3)? My favorite test cases are big file: time cp $file /dev/null &>/dev/null time dd if=$file of=/dev/null \ bs=${bs:-4k} &>/dev/null big file, parallel: time diff $file $file.clone small files: time grep -qr 'doruimi' $dir 2>/dev/null Don't forget to clear the cache before each run: echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches Cheers, Fengguang - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/