Date: Wed, 30 May 2001 02:10:42 -0700 From: Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com> To: Ed Hudson <elh_fbsd@spnet.com> Cc: hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: general speed differences between 4.1.1-RELEASE and 4.3-RELEASE Message-ID: <3B14B912.B870E4F4@mindspring.com> References: <200105260621.f4Q6L6911677@m44.spnet.com>
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Ed Hudson wrote: > > the cost of soft updates, and the cost of hw.ata.wc=0 > > enclosed is a .jpeg of an xgraph of the following interactive test: [ ... ] > hw.ata.wc=0, soft-updates enables. > hw.ata.wc=0, soft-updates disabled. > hw.ata.wc=1, soft-updates disabled. > > the 'points' in the graph are the only real data (the lines > are xgraph's interpolations). A methodology comment... I'd like to see: hw.ata.wc=1, soft-updates enabled. Realize that it is the write caching, not the soft updates, which makes write caching dangerous... it's just as dangerous without soft updates, and mounted sync. The drive lies to us about whether or not the data was committed to stable storage, which is where the problem is coming from. Also, I can't tell if you are using sync or async mounts in the non-soft-updates case: I would suggest doing both. FWIW: I was just as annoyed when /dev/random went in, and shot embedded 386 performance all to hell... at least I actually get something from the write caching tradeoff. -- Terry To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
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