On 3 Oct 2002 at 11:23, Greg Copeland wrote: > On Thu, 2002-10-03 at 10:56, Shridhar Daithankar wrote: > > Well, we were comparing ext3 v/s reiserfs. I don't remember the journalling > > mode of ext3 but we did a 10 GB write test. Besides converting the RAID to RAID- > > 0 from RAID-5 might have something to do about it. > > > > There was a discussion on hackers some time back as in which file system is > > better. I hope this might have an addition over it.. > > > Hmm. Reiserfs' claim to fame is it's low latency with many, many small > files and that it's journaled. I've never seem anyone comment about it > being considered an extremely fast file system in an general computing > context nor have I seen any even hint at it as a file system for use in > heavy I/O databases. This is why Reiserfs is popular with news and > squid cache servers as it's almost an ideal fit. That is, tons of small > files or directories contained within a single directory. As such, I'm > very surprised that reiserfs is even in the running for your comparison. > > Might I point you toward XFS, JFS, or ext3, ? As I understand it, XFS > and JFS are going to be your preferred file systems for for this type of > application with XFS in the lead as it's tool suite is very rich and > robust. I'm actually lacking JFS experience but from what I've read, > it's a notch or two back from XFS in robustness (assuming we are talking > Linux here). Feel free to read and play to find out for your self. I'd > recommend that you start playing with XFS to see how the others > compare. After all, XFS' specific claim to fame is high throughput w/ > low latency on large and very large files. Furthermore, they even have > a real time mechanism that you can further play with to see how it > effects your throughput and/or latencies.
I would try that. Once we are thr. with tests at our hands.. Bye Shridhar -- "The combination of a number of things to make existence worthwhile." "Yes, the philosophy of 'none,' meaning 'all.'" -- Spock and Lincoln, "The Savage Curtain", stardate 5906.4 ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster