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Date:      Wed, 21 Jun 2017 10:15:55 -0600 (MDT)
From:      Warren Block <wblock@wonkity.com>
To:        Tim Daneliuk <tundra@tundraware.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD and Linux SSD Write Speeds
Message-ID:  <alpine.BSF.2.21.1706211014530.60980@wonkity.com>
In-Reply-To: <45657887-638e-bb6d-c318-7046fdea1ca6@tundraware.com>
References:  <45657887-638e-bb6d-c318-7046fdea1ca6@tundraware.com>

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On Wed, 21 Jun 2017, Tim Daneliuk wrote:

> Disclaimer: Tests below run on lightly loaded systems, but results are ... surprising:
>
> Test Case: dd if=/dev/zero of=foo bs=8M count=512
>
> Linux 4.4.0-21-generic on a 2.66GHz Core2 Duo w/8GB memory, older OCZ SSD/ext4:  310MB/sec writes
>
> FreeBSD 10-STABLE on an 3.2 GHz Quad Core i5 w/8GB memory, newer Kingston SSD/ufs:  210MB/sec writes
>
> Results are repeatable.
>
> So, what is the likely culprit making FreeBSD 1/3 slower?  The FreeBSD 
> system does does / nfs exported (which I don't quite yet understand 
> since all the nfs mount points are below it) at the moment, but there 
> is little or no nfs traffic.

Is Linux doing write caching?  They used to do that.



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