justAck wrote:
> Hi,
> I still have to learn bacula internals, but urgently need answer for
> question regarding fragmentation of restored file(s).
>
> Perhaps someone did backup of heavily fragmented file (size: ~100G) and then
> restored it to clean XFS volume on idle box.
> What is more likely:
Hi again,
13.10.2009 20:35, Arno Lehmann wrote:
> Hello,
>
> 13.10.2009 14:27, justAck wrote:
>> Arno,
>>
>>
>> Arno Lehmann wrote:
...
>> Maybe some cache is involved, need to test deeper, just wanted feedback
>> about possible scenarios.
>
> See above - I'd try vmstat 1 during a restore and su
Hello,
13.10.2009 14:27, justAck wrote:
> Arno,
>
>
> Arno Lehmann wrote:
>> ...
>>> a) result file will be most likely not fragmented on disk at all
>> This is most likely in the situation you outline.
>> ...
>>
>> The most common reasons for slow restores, in my experience, are
>> ...
>>
>
>
Arno,
Arno Lehmann wrote:
>
> ...
>> a) result file will be most likely not fragmented on disk at all
>
> This is most likely in the situation you outline.
> ...
>
> The most common reasons for slow restores, in my experience, are
> ...
>
Thanks for quick and useful help.
I meant file acces
justAck wrote:
> The problem is that copying of restored file is ~20% slower than expected
> (than other files), I doubt if bacula may be a reason of this slowdown (e.g.
> result of restore is very fragmented).
Fragmentation is not a performance problem on Unix-like filesystems.
"Sparseness" is (
Hi,
13.10.2009 10:08, justAck wrote:
> Hi,
> I still have to learn bacula internals, but urgently need answer for
> question regarding fragmentation of restored file(s).
>
> Perhaps someone did backup of heavily fragmented file (size: ~100G) and then
> restored it to clean XFS volume on idle box.
Hi,
I still have to learn bacula internals, but urgently need answer for
question regarding fragmentation of restored file(s).
Perhaps someone did backup of heavily fragmented file (size: ~100G) and then
restored it to clean XFS volume on idle box.
What is more likely:
a) result file will be most