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Date:      Fri, 24 Jan 2003 04:13:02 -0800
From:      Darren Pilgrim <dmp@pantherdragon.org>
To:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Filesystem tuning for lots of small files (a Maildir)?
Message-ID:  <3E312DCE.8010607@pantherdragon.org>

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I'm currently facing a problem of having used Netscape (now Mozilla) for
years in Windows and now trying to find something I can regularly use in
FreeBSD without losing Mozilla in Windows.

I've mostly settled on IMAP (courier) with procmail filters, but that 
raises the issue of filesystem performance for directories with large 
numbers of files/subdirectories in them.  I have more than 32,000 emails 
stored.  How do I calculate/see the number of available inodes?  The 
existing filesystem was newfs'd with the sysinstall defaults.  Should I 
re-newfs it with different values?  What would I want to set them at?  I 
  know I'd need to adjust things to make sure I have enough inodes for 
40,000+ files, but what about the block and fragment size?  Should I use 
smaller values like 8192/1024 or 4096/512 or is the default 16384/2048 
best?  Higher values would just increase slack space, right?  What are 
the impacts of lower values?

Some folders, like the one for the postfix-users list, can have 
3000-4000 messages in them.  For growth, we'll say 5000 messages.  The 
IMAP layout with Courier means all the folders sit all on one level 
under ~/Maildir, which means I'd have 200 or so subdirectories in one 
place.  I have the UFS_DIRHASH option enabled for the my MP3 collection, 
but that's as case of 300 subdirecories in one directory, not 5000 
files.  What else can I do to tune for this kind of (ab)use?

P.S.  I really would like to stick with Maildirs and Courier-IMAP for 
this.  I know CIMAP well and it has proven very fast and stable for what 
I do with it.  However, if these demands are just too much to expect 
from an IMAP-accessed Maildir, Courier, or FreeBSD, what are my 
alternatives?



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