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Date:      Tue, 2 Oct 2001 11:33:46 -0500
From:      Alfred Perlstein <bright@mu.org>
To:        Egervary Gergely <mauzi@faber.poli.hu>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: newbie question: filesystem i/o
Message-ID:  <20011002113346.D59854@elvis.mu.org>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.30.0110021739060.25456-100000@faber.poli.hu>; from mauzi@faber.poli.hu on Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 05:59:48PM %2B0200
References:  <Pine.LNX.4.30.0110021739060.25456-100000@faber.poli.hu>

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* Egervary Gergely <mauzi@faber.poli.hu> [011002 11:00] wrote:
> hi hackers,
> 
> I'm quite new to FreeBSD but not in UN*X, please let me ask a question:
> 
> I wonder that the filesystem performance under FreeBSD is so great. I'm
> doing disk-to-disk file copies, like ``dd if=file1 of=file2 bs=64k'' and
> the performance is much better than on other unices. Other systems use
> 16k or 64k (or whatever MAXBSIZE is set to) chunks for sequential i/o, and
> the disk seeks like an evil. On FreeBSD, the disk seeks _much_ less.
> 
> probably FreeBSD is re-blocking the (contigous?) chunks, and does i/o with
> huge blocks like several megabytes? How is it done technically? Is it the
> filesystem, or the VM?
> 
> could someone enlighten me please? :)

Hmm..

http://shop.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?isbn=0201549794

Also, you'll want to clarify what you mean by "most unicies", you can't
compare apples and cold fusion, at least give us an orange, ok? :)

-- 
-Alfred Perlstein [alfred@freebsd.org]
'Instead of asking why a piece of software is using "1970s technology,"
start asking why software is ignoring 30 years of accumulated wisdom.'

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