Date: Fri, 9 Feb 2001 18:31:42 -0800 (PST) From: Matt Dillon <dillon@earth.backplane.com> To: Greg Black <gjb@gbch.net> Cc: freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: soft updates and qmail (RE: qmail IO problems) Message-ID: <200102100231.f1A2Vgd20496@earth.backplane.com> References: <Pine.LNX.4.21.0102061555550.1535-100000@duckman.distro.conectiva> <3A805035.C71AAD5E@monzoon.net> <200102061943.f16Jhp365113@earth.backplane.com> <3A805938.96ED890D@monzoon.net> <200102062018.f16KIdx66146@earth.backplane.com> <200102090602.f1962cM19819@earth.backplane.com> <3A84659C.F841F58E@monzoon.net> <200102092324.f19NODX15558@earth.backplane.com> <nospam-3a849c0ff3134a9@maxim.gbch.net>
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:
:Matt Dillon wrote:
:
:> Yes. In general softupdates will make the entire filesystem safer.
:
:Does it make sense to use softupdates on file systems like / and
:/usr which have little file creation/removal?
:
:Greg
I have had softupdates turned on for all of my mount points for over
a year.
For /, the only issue is that if you have too small a root parition a
'make installworld' may run the filesystem out of space faster then
softupdates can free the blocks. My root partition is always 128M
for that reason (and also so I can throw a few kernel.debug images in
there).
My recommendation is to turn softupdates on for everything you have,
and for us to make it a newfs default as well. At least in -stable.
-Matt
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