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Date:      Mon, 12 Nov 2001 15:27:26 +0100
From:      Daniel Lang <dl@leo.org>
To:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   dirpref benefit on virtual disks
Message-ID:  <20011112152726.A10505@atrbg11.informatik.tu-muenchen.de>

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Hi,

as I understood, the new dirpref algorithm can improve
performance a lot, but only applies to new created directories.
To be able to use it, old existing directories would have to
be created new.

Now I have some huge filesystems on RAID partitions. To recreate
all their directories involves some hassle, but I would think
about doing it. But since these are no real but virtual disks,
spread over a set of disks in a hardware raidbox, I'm not sure, 
if I would even benefit from the better algorithm. It sounded
a bit like designed for filesystems on a (single?) disk?

Could anyone clearify this, please?

Also I would like to know, if there is a certain limit of free
space, on the disk, so that the algorithm can actually use
the better layout? The disks have some space left, in an
absolute way, but not that much from a relative point of view
(like 12GB left which is just 6% minfree not taken into account).

Thanks for your answers.

 Best regards,
  Daniel
-- 
IRCnet: Mr-Spock           - Burn them to ashes, then burn the ashes. -  
*Daniel Lang * dl@leo.org * +49 89 289 25735 * http://www.leo.org/~dl/*

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