Date: Sun, 16 May 2004 11:13:39 -0600 From: Scott Long <scottl@freebsd.org> To: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com> Cc: Michael Hamburg <hamburg@fas.harvard.edu> Subject: Re: fsck in -current Message-ID: <40A7A143.7070907@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <20040516170441.GA80376@dan.emsphone.com> References: <20040515220258.H920@ganymede.hub.org> <D3AE316C-A6D9-11D8-89DA-0003939A19AA@fas.harvard.edu> <20040515233728.Q30269@ganymede.hub.org> <FA17DF77-A6FB-11D8-89DA-0003939A19AA@fas.harvard.edu> <20040516163039.GE29158@dan.emsphone.com> <40A79A54.3090703@freebsd.org> <20040516170441.GA80376@dan.emsphone.com>
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Dan Nelson wrote: > In the last episode (May 16), Scott Long said: > >>Actually, bgfsck unconditionally inserts a delay into every 8th i/o >>operation to try to keep from saturating the disks. Unfortunately >>this isn't terribly sophisticated and it results in bgfsck taking an >>eternity whether the system is idle, loaded, or reniced. > > > See http://dan.allantgroup.com/FreeBSD/fsck_ffs.diff for a patch that > removes the delay if it's at the minimum value, and more fairly > calculates disk wait time. This cuts bgfsck time from ~4 hours to 20 > minutes on my 36gb /usr. > Looks like a reasonable fix. Do you want it reviewed and committed? Scott
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