Date: Sun, 11 Feb 2001 22:47:01 +1000 From: Greg Black <gjb@gbch.net> To: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> Cc: Matt Dillon <dillon@earth.backplane.com>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: soft updates performance Message-ID: <nospam-3a8689c5d616824@maxim.gbch.net> In-Reply-To: <20010211010050.I3274@fw.wintelcom.net> of Sun, 11 Feb 2001 01:00:50 PST References: <200102102245.f1AMj1328151@earth.backplane.com> <nospam-3a863fdf721615e@maxim.gbch.net> <20010211010050.I3274@fw.wintelcom.net>
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Alfred Perlstein wrote: > * Greg Black <gjb@gbch.net> [010210 23:33] wrote: > > Matt Dillon wrote: > > > > > Unless you are doing a read-only mount, there are still going to be > > > cases where having softupdates turned on can be advantageous. For > > > example, installworld will go a lot faster. I also consider softupdates > > > a whole lot safer, even if all you are doing is editing an occassional > > > file. > > > > OK, I'm sold on the general idea of using soft updates; but what > > sort of performance improvements should I expect to see? > > > > I do a kernel compile on a freshly-rebooted box with an without > > softupdates; without, it took 20m45s and with soft updates it > > still took 20m10s --- this is less than 3% faster, which is > > close to statistically insignificant. Is this expected, or is > > there some other factor I should look at? > > Does 'mount' actually show softupdates as active? If not you > need to run 'tunefs' on the partition to set them active. Yes, I ran tunefs as per the manual and I checked with mount. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
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