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Date:      Fri, 03 Sep 2004 17:35:10 +0000
From:      Chris Laverdure <dashevil@sympatico.ca>
To:        Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@linux.gr>
Cc:        freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: what is fsck's "slowdown"?
Message-ID:  <1094232909.76688.1.camel@elemental.DashEvil>
In-Reply-To: <20040903211427.GB1199@gothmog.gr>
References:  <20040903175434.A812@ganymede.hub.org> <20040903211427.GB1199@gothmog.gr>

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On Fri, 2004-09-03 at 21:14, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> On 2004-09-03 18:01, "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@hub.org> wrote:
> >
> > load: 0.99  cmd: fsck 67 [running] 15192.26u 142.30s 99% 184284k
> > /dev/da0s1h: phase 4: cyl group 408 of 866 (47%)
> >
> > wouldn't it be possible, on a dual CPU system, to have group 434 and above
> > run on one process, while group 433 and below running on the second, in
> > parallel?  Its not like the drives are being beat up:
> 
> My intuition says that if metadata of the first part of the disk references
> data residing on the second part synchronization and locking would probably
> be a bit difficult; actually very difficult.

My intuition tells me that it would be a much better solution to run
multiple fsck's concurrently. What harm could there be in fscking (num
of processors) partitions at the same time?



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