File systems performance
Derek Atkins
warlord at MIT.EDU
Fri Oct 21 10:34:11 EDT 2005
I think it all depends on the dataset.. Large or small files? Large
or small
directories?
.. and operations.. Creates? Modifies? Deletes?
The various FSes have different behaviors across this multi-dimensional
matrix.
-derek
Quoting Jerry Feldman <gaf at blu.org>:
> I was in Houston for an HP/Intel Developer forum and was asked about file
> system performance. This was from a guy at a company who has a database
> product, and is interested in performance and not journaling. My top of the
> head answer was that ext2 would probably be the best because it does not
> have the journaling overhead, but I later checked some benchmarks, and
> found that ext2 did not always give the best performance. My advice to him
> was to run their own benchmarks since they were more familiar with their
> product and the data metrics. What I'm looking for here is possibly some
> data you might have accumulated.
>
> (BTW: a number of the benchmarks show ext3 reasonably slow in comparison to
> JFS, ReiserFS, and XFS).
> --
> Jerry Feldman <gaf at blu.org>
> Boston Linux and Unix user group
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--
Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board (SIPB)
URL: http://web.mit.edu/warlord/ PP-ASEL-IA N1NWH
warlord at MIT.EDU PGP key available
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