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* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 20:20 What Filesystem? James Thompson
@ 2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
  2003-01-29 15:32   ` Anders Widman
  2003-01-29 19:02   ` Dieter Nützel
  2003-01-29 15:58 ` Sam Vilain
  2003-01-29 18:16 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Ross Vandegrift @ 2003-01-29 15:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: James Thompson; +Cc: reiserfs-list

On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:20:26PM -0500, James Thompson wrote:
> I am a visual artist and musician.

Check out the document at
http://myweb.cableone.net/eviltwin69/ALSA_JACK_ARDOUR.html.  There a
section that benchmarks various filesystems for their latency.  The
short story is that Reiserfs wins handily over Ext2, Ext3, and FAT32
(duh!  why would someone test that...).  Unfortunately, there's no
comparison between Reiser/JFS/XFS.  I think that would be more of a fair
match.

Anyhow though, for general low-latency multimedia work, ReiserFS looks
like it's a good choice.

-- 
Ross Vandegrift
ross@willow.seitz.com

A Pope has a Water Cannon.                               It is a Water Cannon.
He fires Holy-Water from it.                        It is a Holy-Water Cannon.
He Blesses it.                                 It is a Holy Holy-Water Cannon.
He Blesses the Hell out of it.          It is a Wholly Holy Holy-Water Cannon.
He has it pierced.                It is a Holey Wholly Holy Holy-Water Cannon.
He makes it official.       It is a Canon Holey Wholly Holy Holy-Water Cannon.
Batman and Robin arrive.                                       He shoots them.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
@ 2003-01-29 15:32   ` Anders Widman
  2003-01-29 19:02   ` Dieter Nützel
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Anders Widman @ 2003-01-29 15:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: reiserfs-list

> On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:20:26PM -0500, James Thompson wrote:
>> I am a visual artist and musician.

> Check out the document at
> http://myweb.cableone.net/eviltwin69/ALSA_JACK_ARDOUR.html.  There a
> section that benchmarks various filesystems for their latency.  The
> short story is that Reiserfs wins handily over Ext2, Ext3, and FAT32
> (duh!  why would someone test that...).

Simply  because FAT filesystem is very simple and has little overhead.
If  dealing  with  little  amount  of files and folders then it can be
rather quick, especially if you need CPU resources to other things.

>   Unfortunately, there's no
> comparison between Reiser/JFS/XFS.  I think that would be more of a fair
> match.

> Anyhow though, for general low-latency multimedia work, ReiserFS looks
> like it's a good choice.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 20:20 What Filesystem? James Thompson
  2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
@ 2003-01-29 15:58 ` Sam Vilain
  2003-01-29 19:31   ` Dieter Nützel
  2003-01-29 18:16 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Sam Vilain @ 2003-01-29 15:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: james, reiserfs-list

Reiserfs is probably not what you want for doing lots of high volume data.  
Reiserfs is good with many small files and general purpose use.  It is 
actually the slowest filesystem for bulk data.

I'm sure some smartass will probably post some benchmark to prove me wrong, 
but SGI have a long heritage of making filesystems for exactly what you 
want and so if XFS works I'd say use that.  It's pumpin'.  Of course more 
quantitative comparisons can easily be found on the linux-kernel mailing 
list.

However, the practical difference between the high performance filesystems 
you mentioned, or the difference between running pre-empt or not should be 
considered marginal compared to other factors - such as, the load that 
your hard disk controller places on the system and the number of physical 
disks you have (and how many RPM they run at).  Keep in mind that you can 
often nearly double the data throughput of a system by doubling the number 
of physical disks in it, and using RAID.

Even with the latest UDMA-133, I haven't seen any IDE system actually 
perform without bothering the CPU non-trivially (of course YMMV).  Using 
SCSI disks and controllers will give you a smoother system ride; which is 
why 95% of high-end workstations come equipped with SCSI.  You can get 
15,000 RPM U320 SCSI disks, which are f*** fast (though loud).  This is 
largely because the SCSI protocol was designed properly, IDE/ATA is a 
hack.  Serial-ATA promises to offer SCSI like host efficiency, but I'll 
only believe it when I see it.  And at the moment the costs are as bad as 
SCSI anyway.

Of course, being able to move around large chunks of data quickly extends 
to other parts of the system, too.  The bigger and faster the system BUS, 
the better.  Having `researched hardware platforms' you should know this, 
of course.  As far as Athlon Motherboards go, Tyan are a reputable vendor 
who used to produce Sun clone motherboards - they have a really nice dual 
capable system with dual U160 SCSI controllers and 66MHz PCI slots - which 
must mean that the SCSI controllers run at that speed.  It's definitely 
worth the ~$500 price tag.  They all pale in comparison to R10000+ based 
SGI or Sparc 9+ platforms of course.

From a graphic artist's perspective, you're probably better off buying a 
new G4 based system and running MacOS X, you know :-).  Linux isn't 
exactly `The Platform' for digital content creation.  The Mac's CPU and 
hardware platform are a lot better at moving data around, and if you've 
got a Mac then you can run Mac OS X, or Linux + Mac OS inside an emulator 
(which runs FAST!).

As a final note, keep in mind that a filesystem reformat does not mean a 
re-install; keep your partitions as small as practical and you can change 
them over individually.

Sam.

On Thu, 30 Jan 2003 09:20, James Thompson wrote:
> Dear Sirs,
>
> I am a visual artist and musician.  As well as a range of traditional
> media I use Linux Mandrake 8.0 on an old Athlon-based PC.  I wrote to
> Mr. Hans Reiser, after following a mailto link on the Namesys website,
> with a slightly lengthier version of the question written below, and was
> advised that "This is really a better question for our mailing list
> (reiserfs-list@namesys.com) than for me, as I am obviously biased."  I
> am therefore sending this email to you in the hope that somebody may be
> able to solve my puzzle - or at least direct me towards another
> knowledgeable source of information!  Thank you.
>
>  >> The question:
>
> ... I have done much research in the field of computer /hardware/
> suitable for commercial Digital Content Creation (P4 Xeon; Wildcat
> graphics; ART's "PURE" raytracing PCI render board, etc. ...) and now
> look to a better understanding of the choices I might make for a
> (presumably) Linux-based OS running on (presumably) Intel 32-bit
> hardware SUCH AS these two elements:-
>
>      1. Kernel Patches - pre-empt and low latency;
>      2. File System type - EXT3, ReiserFS, SGi's XFS, HFS, JFS....;
>
> Would you be able to advsie me on any issues I might need to be aware of
> and perhaps any firm decisions you think would be good for me to make,
> regarding OS choice and configuration?  I realise that all pre-built
> workstations supplied by Dell, IBM and HP-Compaq come with RedHat, but,
> just for the record, I like Mandrake and I am getting into the
> WindowMaker desktop :).
>
> I also develop my website locally using Apache (but hosted on Freeserve
>
> :( ), and I understand pre-empt &/or low-latency patches are
>
> counter-effective for servers.  However, as long as no real harm can be
> expected, my priority is for graphics and sound creation, editing,
> compositing, publishing, etc., while fast response for just developing
> html pages isn't.
>
> I would like to believe that, somewhere, I can get a 'standard' Linux
> patched for optimal DCC, with suitable FS type available to choose from
> during installation.  If not, I will have to find and apply patches, but
> I know that with FS type any change demands a reformat, which can really
> disrupt a working week!
>
>  >> [End question]
>
> Yours faithfully,
>
> James Thompson,
> Visual Artist & Musician
> H.E. Student of Fine Arts

-- 
Sam Vilain, sam@vilain.net

  Sure there are dishonest men in local government.  But there are
dishonest men in national government too.
RICHARD M NIXON

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 20:20 What Filesystem? James Thompson
  2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
  2003-01-29 15:58 ` Sam Vilain
@ 2003-01-29 18:16 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  2003-01-29 19:43   ` Dieter Nützel
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Valdis.Kletnieks @ 2003-01-29 18:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: james; +Cc: reiserfs-list

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1282 bytes --]

On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 15:20:26 EST, James Thompson <james@jtmstudio.fsbusiness.co.uk>  said:

> ... I have done much research in the field of computer /hardware/ 
> suitable for commercial Digital Content Creation (P4 Xeon; Wildcat 
> graphics; ART's "PURE" raytracing PCI render board, etc. ...) and now

Hmm.. so we're looking at high-end rendering, which is usually a CPU hog.
 
>      1. Kernel Patches - pre-empt and low latency;

so I'm not clear on why you're worried about low latency?  Remember that
it *does* come with an overhead - the low-latency stuff is good if you're
more concerned about fast response than total system load (for instance,
on my laptop I'm willing to give up 5% of the CPU if it makes the X server
run perceivably  faster.  If I was doing a lot of rendering, I'd want that
5% for user cycles.

Could you be more specific regarding what sort of content you are making?
(i.e. single frame images suitable for monitor display (1600x1200 and smaller),
or large-format for high-resolution printing (posters, etc), or video, etc..)
The resources needed to produce a 10-minute video clip are different from the
things you'll need to produce a 4 foot x 5 foot poster at 600DPI.
-- 
				Valdis Kletnieks
				Computer Systems Senior Engineer
				Virginia Tech


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
  2003-01-29 15:32   ` Anders Widman
@ 2003-01-29 19:02   ` Dieter Nützel
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Dieter Nützel @ 2003-01-29 19:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ross Vandegrift, James Thompson; +Cc: reiserfs-list

Am Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2003 16:28 schrieb Ross Vandegrift:
> On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:20:26PM -0500, James Thompson wrote:
> > I am a visual artist and musician.
>
> Check out the document at
> http://myweb.cableone.net/eviltwin69/ALSA_JACK_ARDOUR.html.  There a
> section that benchmarks various filesystems for their latency.  The
> short story is that Reiserfs wins handily over Ext2, Ext3, and FAT32
> (duh!  why would someone test that...).  Unfortunately, there's no
> comparison between Reiser/JFS/XFS.  I think that would be more of a fair
> match.

XFS could win _today_ for "real time" (granted video bandwidth, for which it 
was designed in the first place), but this could change (compensate) with the 
latest ReiserFS 3.x patches (data logging) and finally Reiser4 (see the 
Reiser Homepage).

> Anyhow though, for general low-latency multimedia work, ReiserFS looks
> like it's a good choice.

Yes.

Go with low-latency _and_ preemption patches (try Gentoo, it has it all).
I did beta testing for Robert Love (MontaVista) for ages and it is _the way to 
go_ for multi media machines.

Greetings,
	Dieter

-- 
Dieter Nützel
Graduate Student, Computer Science

University of Hamburg
Department of Computer Science
@home: Dieter.Nuetzel at hamburg.de (replace at with @)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 15:58 ` Sam Vilain
@ 2003-01-29 19:31   ` Dieter Nützel
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Dieter Nützel @ 2003-01-29 19:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Sam Vilain, james, reiserfs-list

Am Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2003 16:58 schrieb Sam Vilain:
> Reiserfs is probably not what you want for doing lots of high volume data.
> Reiserfs is good with many small files and general purpose use.  It is
> actually the slowest filesystem for bulk data.

To general ;-)

> I'm sure some smartass will probably post some benchmark to prove me wrong,
> but SGI have a long heritage of making filesystems for exactly what you
> want and so if XFS works I'd say use that.  It's pumpin'.  Of course more
> quantitative comparisons can easily be found on the linux-kernel mailing
> list.

No. View the ext2/3, Reiser, FS mailing lists.
XFS was designed for granted video/audio bandwidth in the first place.
Latest ReiserFS 3.x patches catches up and Reiser4 will do some/better.

> However, the practical difference between the high performance filesystems
> you mentioned, or the difference between running pre-empt or not should be
> considered marginal compared to other factors

You have to split this into two sentences.

"High performance filesystems" and low kernel response (low latency and 
pre-emption).

You will have all three together I "swear";-)
Everyone who haven't tested a "multi media"/VIS workstation (3D OpenGL/Mesa 
(DRI) graphics) without pre-emption and low latency should try.

> - such as, the load that
> your hard disk controller places on the system and the number of physical
> disks you have (and how many RPM they run at).  Keep in mind that you can
> often nearly double the data throughput of a system by doubling the number
> of physical disks in it, and using RAID.

Yes. Hard or SoftRAID as you like.

> Even with the latest UDMA-133, I haven't seen any IDE system actually
> perform without bothering the CPU non-trivially (of course YMMV).  Using
> SCSI disks and controllers will give you a smoother system ride; which is
> why 95% of high-end workstations come equipped with SCSI.  You can get
> 15,000 RPM U320 SCSI disks, which are f*** fast (though loud).  This is
> largely because the SCSI protocol was designed properly, IDE/ATA is a
> hack.  Serial-ATA promises to offer SCSI like host efficiency, but I'll
> only believe it when I see it.  And at the moment the costs are as bad as
> SCSI anyway.

Very true.
But ATA-RAID (SoftRAID) together with LVM/LVM2/EVMS is OK.

> Of course, being able to move around large chunks of data quickly extends
> to other parts of the system, too.  The bigger and faster the system BUS,
> the better.  Having `researched hardware platforms' you should know this,
> of course.  As far as Athlon Motherboards go, Tyan are a reputable vendor
> who used to produce Sun clone motherboards - they have a really nice dual
> capable system with dual U160 SCSI controllers and 66MHz PCI slots - which
> must mean that the SCSI controllers run at that speed.  It's definitely
> worth the ~$500 price tag.  They all pale in comparison to R10000+ based
> SGI or Sparc 9+ platforms of course.

All AMD 768MPX dual motherboards have 2 PCI64/66 slots.

Running a MSI K7D Master-L, (aka MS-6501, Rev 1.0, AMD 768MPX), dual Athlon MP 
1900+, 1 GB DDR-SDRAM 266 CL2 (2x 512 MB), Radeon 8500 (DRI CVS), 10k U160 
system, here.

> From a graphic artist's perspective, you're probably better off buying a
> new G4 based system and running MacOS X, you know :-).

If you already have the software for Mac, yes. But if you will/have to buy it 
then you can go fine with Linux. See all the good "Hollywood" reports.

> Linux isn't exactly `The Platform' for digital content creation.

To general.
Some apps are missing, but it catches up very fast.
Even with low lateny and pre-emption. With Linux 2.6 still around it _is_ 
predestinated for this stuff

> The Mac's CPU and hardware platform are a lot better at moving data around,

In short: NO.

You have much more hardware alternatives with Linux.
Consider the brand new AMD Hammer waiting for launch.

> and if you've got a Mac then you can run Mac OS X, or Linux + Mac OS
> inside an emulator (which runs FAST!).

Yes. But fast? ;-)
Most Linux binary apps are made for x86 systems.

> As a final note, keep in mind that a filesystem reformat does not mean a
> re-install; keep your partitions as small as practical and you can change
> them over individually.

See above: LVM/LVM2/EVMS

[full quote deleted]

Regards,
	Dieter

-- 
Dieter Nützel
Graduate Student, Computer Science

University of Hamburg
Department of Computer Science
@home: Dieter.Nuetzel at hamburg.de (replace at with @)


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 18:16 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
@ 2003-01-29 19:43   ` Dieter Nützel
  2003-01-29 20:09     ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Dieter Nützel @ 2003-01-29 19:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Valdis.Kletnieks, james; +Cc: reiserfs-list

Am Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2003 19:16 schrieb Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu:
> On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 15:20:26 EST, James Thompson 
<james@jtmstudio.fsbusiness.co.uk>  said:
> > ... I have done much research in the field of computer /hardware/
> > suitable for commercial Digital Content Creation (P4 Xeon; Wildcat
> > graphics; ART's "PURE" raytracing PCI render board, etc. ...) and now
>
> Hmm.. so we're looking at high-end rendering, which is usually a CPU hog.
>
> >      1. Kernel Patches - pre-empt and low latency;
>
> so I'm not clear on why you're worried about low latency?  Remember that
> it *does* come with an overhead

What? --- Sorry, quantify it. I can't.
All low latency and pre-emption tests have showed _improved_ throughput (Yes) 
and much better "multi media" (video/audio) "experience" ;-)
No measurable overhead an single and SMP systems (both Athlon).
That's why it is in 2.5/2.6.

> - the low-latency stuff is good if you're
> more concerned about fast response than total system load (for instance,
> on my laptop I'm willing to give up 5% of the CPU if it makes the X server
> run perceivably  faster.  If I was doing a lot of rendering, I'd want that
> 5% for user cycles.

But you want to have the much better "task switching behavior" together with 
the "brand new" O(1) scheduler.

> Could you be more specific regarding what sort of content you are making?
> (i.e. single frame images suitable for monitor display (1600x1200 and
> smaller), or large-format for high-resolution printing (posters, etc), or
> video, etc..) The resources needed to produce a 10-minute video clip are
> different from the things you'll need to produce a 4 foot x 5 foot poster
> at 600DPI.

You mean single vs 2-/4-/8-/etc. (NUMA) SMP systems or even clusters? ;-)

Greetings,
	Dieter

-- 
Dieter Nützel
Graduate Student, Computer Science

University of Hamburg
Department of Computer Science
@home: Dieter.Nuetzel at hamburg.de (replace at with @)


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 19:43   ` Dieter Nützel
@ 2003-01-29 20:09     ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  2003-01-29 20:16       ` Dieter Nützel
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Valdis.Kletnieks @ 2003-01-29 20:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Dieter Nützel; +Cc: james, reiserfs-list

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1295 bytes --]

On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 20:43:38 +0100, Dieter =?iso-8859-1?q?N=FCtzel?= said:

> All low latency and pre-emption tests have showed _improved_ throughput (Yes)
 
> and much better "multi media" (video/audio) "experience" ;-)
> No measurable overhead an single and SMP systems (both Athlon).
> That's why it is in 2.5/2.6.

Yes, but my *point* was that if the box is busy doing a 5-hour rendering
job, the low-latency *wont make a difference*.  If you're doing audio work
or video captures, yes the low-latency/preempt stuff will help.  If you're
in a single thread that's CPU-bound, there's no need to go installing 2.5
to get it.

> But you want to have the much better "task switching behavior" together with 
> the "brand new" O(1) scheduler.

You want that *if* the actual load will benefit from it.  See my comment
above about rendering...

> You mean single vs 2-/4-/8-/etc. (NUMA) SMP systems or even clusters? ;-)

Some things are doable with a single CPU, some things need the NUMA stuff,
other things can use a Beowulf.  Thus the need to quantify what the actual
requirements are.  Video editing will bottleneck on different things than
photorealistic rendering of graphics.

-- 
				Valdis Kletnieks
				Computer Systems Senior Engineer
				Virginia Tech


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* Re: What Filesystem?
  2003-01-29 20:09     ` Valdis.Kletnieks
@ 2003-01-29 20:16       ` Dieter Nützel
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Dieter Nützel @ 2003-01-29 20:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Valdis.Kletnieks; +Cc: james, reiserfs-list

Am Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2003 21:09 schrieb Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu:
> On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 20:43:38 +0100, Dieter =?iso-8859-1?q?N=FCtzel?= said:
> > All low latency and pre-emption tests have showed _improved_ throughput
> > (Yes)
> >
> > and much better "multi media" (video/audio) "experience" ;-)
> > No measurable overhead an single and SMP systems (both Athlon).
> > That's why it is in 2.5/2.6.
>
> Yes, but my *point* was that if the box is busy doing a 5-hour rendering
> job, the low-latency *wont make a difference*.  If you're doing audio work
> or video captures, yes the low-latency/preempt stuff will help.  If you're
> in a single thread that's CPU-bound, there's no need to go installing 2.5
> to get it.
>
> > But you want to have the much better "task switching behavior" together
> > with the "brand new" O(1) scheduler.
>
> You want that *if* the actual load will benefit from it.  See my comment
> above about rendering...

I am all with you.

> > You mean single vs 2-/4-/8-/etc. (NUMA) SMP systems or even clusters? ;-)
>
> Some things are doable with a single CPU, some things need the NUMA stuff,
> other things can use a Beowulf.  Thus the need to quantify what the actual
> requirements are.  Video editing will bottleneck on different things than
> photorealistic rendering of graphics.

Very true.

Regards,
	Dieter

-- 
Dieter Nützel
Graduate Student, Computer Science

University of Hamburg
Department of Computer Science
@home: Dieter.Nuetzel at hamburg.de (replace at with @)


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

* What Filesystem?
@ 2003-01-29 20:20 James Thompson
  2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: James Thompson @ 2003-01-29 20:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: reiserfs-list

Dear Sirs,

I am a visual artist and musician.  As well as a range of traditional 
media I use Linux Mandrake 8.0 on an old Athlon-based PC.  I wrote to 
Mr. Hans Reiser, after following a mailto link on the Namesys website, 
with a slightly lengthier version of the question written below, and was 
advised that "This is really a better question for our mailing list 
(reiserfs-list@namesys.com) than for me, as I am obviously biased."  I 
am therefore sending this email to you in the hope that somebody may be 
able to solve my puzzle - or at least direct me towards another 
knowledgeable source of information!  Thank you.

 >> The question:

... I have done much research in the field of computer /hardware/ 
suitable for commercial Digital Content Creation (P4 Xeon; Wildcat 
graphics; ART's "PURE" raytracing PCI render board, etc. ...) and now 
look to a better understanding of the choices I might make for a 
(presumably) Linux-based OS running on (presumably) Intel 32-bit 
hardware SUCH AS these two elements:-

     1. Kernel Patches - pre-empt and low latency;
     2. File System type - EXT3, ReiserFS, SGi's XFS, HFS, JFS....;

Would you be able to advsie me on any issues I might need to be aware of 
and perhaps any firm decisions you think would be good for me to make, 
regarding OS choice and configuration?  I realise that all pre-built 
workstations supplied by Dell, IBM and HP-Compaq come with RedHat, but, 
just for the record, I like Mandrake and I am getting into the 
WindowMaker desktop :).

I also develop my website locally using Apache (but hosted on Freeserve 
:( ), and I understand pre-empt &/or low-latency patches are 
counter-effective for servers.  However, as long as no real harm can be 
expected, my priority is for graphics and sound creation, editing, 
compositing, publishing, etc., while fast response for just developing 
html pages isn't.

I would like to believe that, somewhere, I can get a 'standard' Linux 
patched for optimal DCC, with suitable FS type available to choose from 
during installation.  If not, I will have to find and apply patches, but 
I know that with FS type any change demands a reformat, which can really 
disrupt a working week!

 >> [End question]


Yours faithfully,

James Thompson,
Visual Artist & Musician
H.E. Student of Fine Arts


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2003-01-29 20:20 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 10+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2003-01-29 20:20 What Filesystem? James Thompson
2003-01-29 15:28 ` Ross Vandegrift
2003-01-29 15:32   ` Anders Widman
2003-01-29 19:02   ` Dieter Nützel
2003-01-29 15:58 ` Sam Vilain
2003-01-29 19:31   ` Dieter Nützel
2003-01-29 18:16 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2003-01-29 19:43   ` Dieter Nützel
2003-01-29 20:09     ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2003-01-29 20:16       ` Dieter Nützel

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