On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 01:35:31PM -0700, valrh...@gmail.com wrote: > Finally, for my purposes, it doesn't seem like a ZIL is necessary? I'm > the only user of the fileserver, so there probably won't be more than > two or three computers, maximum, accessing stuff (and writing stuff) > remotely.
It depends on what you're doing. The perennial complaint about NFS is the synchronous open()/close() operations and the fact that archivers (tar, ...) will generally unpack archives in a single-threaded manner, which means all those synchronous ops punctuate the archiver's performance with pauses. This is a load type for which ZIL devices come in quite handy. If you write lots of small files often and in single-threaded ways _and_ want to guarantee you don't lose transactions, then you want a ZIL device. (The recent knob for controlling whether synchronous I/O gets done asynchronously would help you if you don't care about losing a few seconds worth of writes, assuming that feature makes it into any release of Solaris.) > But, from what I can gather, by spending a little under $400, I should > substantially increase the performance of my system with dedup? Many > thanks, again, in advance. If you have deduplicatious data, yes. Nico -- _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss