Marcelo Leal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello all, > I think he got some point here... maybe that would be an interesting > feature for that kind of workload. Caching all the metadata, would make t > the rsync task more fast (for many files). Try to cache the data is really > waste of time, because the data will not be read again, and will just send > away the "good" metadata cached. That is what i understand when he said > about the 96k being descarded soon. He wants to "configure" an area to > "copy the data", and that´s it. Leave my metadata cache alone. ;-)
That's a common enough behavior pattern that Per Brinch Hansen defined a distinct filetype for it in, if memory serves, the RC 4000. As soon as it's read, it's gone. We saw this behavior on NFS servers in the Markham ACE lab, and absolutely with Samba almost everywhere. My Smarter Colleagues[tm] explained it as a normal pattern whenever you have front-end caching, as backend caching is then rendered far less effective, and sometimes directly disadvantageous. It sounded like, from the previous discussion, one could tune for it with the level 1 and 2 caches, although if I understood it properly, the particular machine also had to narrow a stripe for the particular load being discussed... --dave -- David Collier-Brown | Always do right. This will gratify Sun Microsystems, Toronto | some people and astonish the rest [EMAIL PROTECTED] | -- Mark Twain cell: (647) 833-9377, bridge: (877) 385-4099 code: 506 9191# _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss