* Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 @ 2006-01-06 18:10 Robert Hulme 2006-01-06 19:09 ` PFC 2006-01-07 12:41 ` Andrea Gelmini 0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Robert Hulme @ 2006-01-06 18:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. Slashdot have linked to this now so I suspect it will get a lot of eyeballs. -Rob -- ------------------------------------------------------ "Verbing weirds language" - Calvin "Java: Write once, debug everywhere." http://www.robhulme.com/ http://robhu.livejournal.com/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-06 18:10 Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 Robert Hulme @ 2006-01-06 19:09 ` PFC 2006-01-06 20:15 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-07 12:41 ` Andrea Gelmini 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: PFC @ 2006-01-06 19:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list Hehe. Wow. Sure, a benchmark that runs in 0.03 seconds for the fastest one and 0.07 seconds for the slowest one looks pretty reliable to me. How much time does it take to spawn the "touch" process 10k times ? Hm... I'd guess most of the benchmark time ? On Fri, 06 Jan 2006 19:10:47 +0100, Robert Hulme <rob@robhulme.com> wrote: > http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz > > It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. > > Slashdot have linked to this now so I suspect it will get a lot of > eyeballs. > > -Rob > -- > ------------------------------------------------------ > "Verbing weirds language" - Calvin > "Java: Write once, debug everywhere." > > http://www.robhulme.com/ > http://robhu.livejournal.com/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-06 19:09 ` PFC @ 2006-01-06 20:15 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-08 22:07 ` Edward Shishkin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-06 20:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: PFC, jpiszcz; +Cc: reiserfs-list, Alexander Zarochentcev PFC wrote: > > Hehe. Wow. Sure, a benchmark that runs in 0.03 seconds for the > fastest one and 0.07 seconds for the slowest one looks pretty > reliable to me. How much time does it take to spawn the "touch" > process 10k times ? Hm... I'd guess most of the benchmark time ? Well said, but there are some results we need to investigate and reproduce. If someone is still learning about benchmarking and learning still that benchmarks that take fractions of a second are meaningless, it means that the possibility for error in other aspects is high. I am willing to bet that he copied and tar'd the kernel from a different filesystem than the one he benchmarked, as this is the standard mistake everyone makes at first, and the impact on performance is HUGE. That said, everyone hits things from a different angle. I'd really like to have the guys reproduce his big file copy benchmark, as that seems hard to believe in, unless, well, if the problem is that the file is not big enough, it would make a lot of sense. reiser4 used to have a quality that once it starts to flush something, it really flushes it, and if a file is the wrong size that can be a disadvantage. I thought we had done something about that, but maybe it is still there. zam, please comment. There is probably stuff of value in there, we just have to look at it, and you should all understand that Slashdot and Linux Gazette are not the same as peer reviewed journals (though I must say that a lot of the slashdot posters made good remarks and found flaws that I missed, like he uses a 500Mhz cpu and a modern hard drive). A pity the guys are on vacation..... Justin, if you need access to a modern CPU, we can give you time on one of our servers. We have an AMD64.... I am sure others can loan you access to hardware also. Justin, if you would like feedback before you publish on benchmarks, we would be happy to provide it. Benchmarking turns out to require at least as much experience as designing filesystems to do well, and indeed how well one writes a filesystem is often directly related to how well one analyzes its performance with benchmarks.;-) Hans > > On Fri, 06 Jan 2006 19:10:47 +0100, Robert Hulme <rob@robhulme.com> > wrote: > >> http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz >> >> It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. >> >> Slashdot have linked to this now so I suspect it will get a lot of >> eyeballs. >> >> -Rob >> -- >> ------------------------------------------------------ >> "Verbing weirds language" - Calvin >> "Java: Write once, debug everywhere." >> >> http://www.robhulme.com/ >> http://robhu.livejournal.com/ > > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-06 20:15 ` Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-08 22:07 ` Edward Shishkin 2006-01-09 11:04 ` Re[2]: " Pysiak Satriani 2006-01-10 7:57 ` Hans Reiser 0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Edward Shishkin @ 2006-01-08 22:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hans Reiser; +Cc: PFC, jpiszcz, reiserfs-list, Alexander Zarochentcev Hans Reiser wrote: >PFC wrote: > > > >> Hehe. Wow. Sure, a benchmark that runs in 0.03 seconds for the >>fastest one and 0.07 seconds for the slowest one looks pretty >>reliable to me. How much time does it take to spawn the "touch" >>process 10k times ? Hm... I'd guess most of the benchmark time ? >> >> > > > Let's consider this important aspect of benchmarking more carefully. So there is an interesting question: how much should be a difference in order to approve that some fs really wins at this statistics? Is there any guarantee you won't get, say, 0.05 and 0.02 after next run? Sorry, but I didn't find any answer in Justin's notes, NOTE5 (Tests Performed) says that questionable tests were re-run, but it seems we need something kinda research here instead of re-run. Below are some comments for how this problem is resolved (1*) in mongo benchmark. Look for example at this table: http://www.namesys.com/benchmarks.html#mongo.2.6.11 Fractions like 0.982 (D/A), 1.017 (C/A) are in black color, it means that we _can not_ do any assumptions about winner because |1 - X/A| < 0.02. What the magic M = 0.02 is? Let's run the same phase for the same settings (file system, file set, etc..) 10 times. We will obtain for the same statistics X a set of different (because of errors) values x1, x2, ..., x10. Suppose that X has a normal distribution (any objections?). It means that we can calculate its trusted interval for a single measurement (2*) as [X - d(P), X + d(P)], where d(P) = D*U(P), D is dispersion and U(P) should be found from the standard table by any nominated value of trusted probability P (3*). Now we have the following simple criterion (*4): |A - X| >= 2d(P), i.e. |1 - X/A| >= 2D*U(P)/A | |<-d->| |<-d->| ------<-----|----->----<-----|----->------ A X The magic M = 0.02 for mongo benchmark was calculated as 2D*U(P)/A for the trusted probability P=0.85 (5*). Now it is clear from the formula above why statistics shouldn't be too small: because the criterion becomes false. I am sure (and it is easy to check) 2d(P=0.85) is much more then |0.07 - 0.03| as it is in the case of find 10000 files. By the way, some settings, which provide a small values (~5 sec) of the mongo STATS statistics also make this criterion false. (1*) Maybe this is not a perfect way, but it is better then nothing (2*) For N measurements the expression for boundaries becomes a bit complicated. (3*) For P=0.85 (as we can found in any scientific book) U(P)=1.44 (4*) One more assumption here about identical distributions of A and X (5*) Actually D = max(D_create, D_copy, D_read, D_delete, D_dd), where D_each_phase was estimated once by 10 measurements with some fixed settings by the standard way: D^2 = ((x - x1)^2 + ... + (x - x10)^2)/(10 - 1), where x = (x1 + ... + x10)/10 is an average value. Edward. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re[2]: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-08 22:07 ` Edward Shishkin @ 2006-01-09 11:04 ` Pysiak Satriani 2006-01-09 19:50 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-10 7:57 ` Hans Reiser 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Pysiak Satriani @ 2006-01-09 11:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Edward Shishkin; +Cc: PFC, jpiszcz, reiserfs-list, Alexander Zarochentcev Hello Edward, Sunday, January 8, 2006, 11:07:46 PM, you wrote: > Let's consider this important aspect of benchmarking more carefully. > So there is an interesting question: how much should be a difference > in order to approve that some fs really wins at this statistics? Is > there any guarantee you won't get, say, 0.05 and 0.02 after next run? > Sorry, but I didn't find any answer in Justin's notes, NOTE5 (Tests > Performed) says that questionable tests were re-run, but it seems we > need something kinda research here instead of re-run. Exactly. By the way, Justin writes he did only 3 tests and calculated the average out of these 3. In statistics this is a very small sample. We would need at least 30 or so. If the results would have a big variance, they should be treated with exponential smoothening. And then we can go off with the calculations. Also It would be nice to have data from the exact tests made regularly to test for regressions and see what's the trend. > etc..) 10 times. We will obtain for the same statistics X a set of > different (because of errors) values x1, x2, ..., x10. Suppose that > X has a normal distribution (any objections?) Well, for serious reasoning a smirnof-kolmogorov test should be used or Shapiro-Wilk or any other that applies to check the normal distribution. If it is, we can go ahead with all the calculations. If not.. Well, I'm not enough of a statistics guru to say :-) Regards, Maciej ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-09 11:04 ` Re[2]: " Pysiak Satriani @ 2006-01-09 19:50 ` Hans Reiser 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-09 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Pysiak Satriani Cc: Edward Shishkin, PFC, jpiszcz, reiserfs-list, Alexander Zarochentcev Pysiak Satriani wrote: >Hello Edward, > >Sunday, January 8, 2006, 11:07:46 PM, you wrote: > > >>Let's consider this important aspect of benchmarking more carefully. >>So there is an interesting question: how much should be a difference >>in order to approve that some fs really wins at this statistics? Is >>there any guarantee you won't get, say, 0.05 and 0.02 after next run? >>Sorry, but I didn't find any answer in Justin's notes, NOTE5 (Tests >>Performed) says that questionable tests were re-run, but it seems we >>need something kinda research here instead of re-run. >> >> >Exactly. By the way, Justin writes he did only 3 tests and calculated >the average out of these 3. In statistics this is a very small sample. >We would need at least 30 or so. If the results would have a big >variance, they should be treated with exponential smoothening. >And then we can go off with the calculations. Also It would be nice >to have data from the exact tests made regularly to test for regressions >and see what's the trend. > > I can just tell you from experience that benchmarks that take less than a minute have a high tendency to be poor measures He should increase the size of the benchmark until each thing he measures takes more than 2 minutes. If it is reproduceable it can be still meaningless. Hans ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-08 22:07 ` Edward Shishkin 2006-01-09 11:04 ` Re[2]: " Pysiak Satriani @ 2006-01-10 7:57 ` Hans Reiser 1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-10 7:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Edward Shishkin; +Cc: PFC, jpiszcz, reiserfs-list, Alexander Zarochentcev Did we really do the sophisticated statistical analysis below? I assumed we had just taken a look at how much our numbers tended to vary, and based on experience assumed anything less than 2% was not above noise.;-) The other rule of thumb I have is that really short times can be amazingly unreliable indicators even when reproduceable. I am not entirely sure of why, but I know it to be true.;-) People suggest such things as timer inaccuracy, but perhaps there is more inaccuracy than that could explain. Perhaps it is scheduler timing related? I don't know why it is, I just know it is so. I do like the way Zam did the red/green/black numbers by the way, I think I forgot to compliment him on it (it was Zam who did it?). We need to reproduce Justin's benchmark, fixing the mistakes he made in its design, and then see how we do at it. We need to know such things as, how did he generate filenames, etc. When people get back.... Hans Edward Shishkin wrote: > Hans Reiser wrote: > >> PFC wrote: >> >> >> >>> Hehe. Wow. Sure, a benchmark that runs in 0.03 seconds for the >>> fastest one and 0.07 seconds for the slowest one looks pretty >>> reliable to me. How much time does it take to spawn the "touch" >>> process 10k times ? Hm... I'd guess most of the benchmark time ? >>> >> >> >> >> > > Let's consider this important aspect of benchmarking more carefully. > So there is an interesting question: how much should be a difference > in order to approve that some fs really wins at this statistics? Is > there any guarantee you won't get, say, 0.05 and 0.02 after next run? > Sorry, but I didn't find any answer in Justin's notes, NOTE5 (Tests > Performed) says that questionable tests were re-run, but it seems we > need something kinda research here instead of re-run. > > Below are some comments for how this problem is resolved (1*) in mongo > benchmark. Look for example at this table: > http://www.namesys.com/benchmarks.html#mongo.2.6.11 > Fractions like 0.982 (D/A), 1.017 (C/A) are in black color, it means > that we _can not_ do any assumptions about winner because > |1 - X/A| < 0.02. What the magic M = 0.02 is? > Let's run the same phase for the same settings (file system, file set, > etc..) 10 times. We will obtain for the same statistics X a set of > different (because of errors) values x1, x2, ..., x10. Suppose that > X has a normal distribution (any objections?). It means that we can > calculate its trusted interval for a single measurement (2*) as > [X - d(P), X + d(P)], where d(P) = D*U(P), D is dispersion and U(P) > should be found from the standard table by any nominated value of > trusted probability P (3*). > Now we have the following simple criterion (*4): > > |A - X| >= 2d(P), i.e. |1 - X/A| >= 2D*U(P)/A > > | |<-d->| |<-d->| > ------<-----|----->----<-----|----->------ > A X > > The magic M = 0.02 for mongo benchmark was calculated as 2D*U(P)/A > for the trusted probability P=0.85 (5*). > Now it is clear from the formula above why statistics shouldn't be > too small: because the criterion becomes false. I am sure (and it > is easy to check) 2d(P=0.85) is much more then |0.07 - 0.03| as it > is in the case of find 10000 files. By the way, some settings, which > provide a small values (~5 sec) of the mongo STATS statistics also > make this criterion false. > > > (1*) Maybe this is not a perfect way, but it is better then nothing > (2*) For N measurements the expression for boundaries becomes a bit > complicated. > (3*) For P=0.85 (as we can found in any scientific book) U(P)=1.44 > (4*) One more assumption here about identical distributions of A and X > (5*) Actually D = max(D_create, D_copy, D_read, D_delete, D_dd), where > D_each_phase was estimated once by 10 measurements with some fixed > settings by the standard way: > D^2 = ((x - x1)^2 + ... + (x - x10)^2)/(10 - 1), where > x = (x1 + ... + x10)/10 is an average value. > > Edward. > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-06 18:10 Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 Robert Hulme 2006-01-06 19:09 ` PFC @ 2006-01-07 12:41 ` Andrea Gelmini 2006-01-07 14:03 ` Philippe Gramoullé 2006-01-09 18:22 ` Hans Reiser 1 sibling, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Andrea Gelmini @ 2006-01-07 12:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1171 bytes --] 2006/1/6, Robert Hulme <rob@robhulme.com>: > > http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz > > It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. I really did not understand this kind of benchmark. I don't care which filesystem is faster creating 10.000 files (something I never have to do). I care about which filesystem fits better with my everyday use of my data. Days ago I wrote a few script trying to simulate a tipical desktop session, *my* tipical desktop session. With different filesystem I've got difference of minutes. That's a benchmark that mean something to me. Why I'm trying/looking at reiser4? Because: a) seeks are the real problem of hd (they kill performance); b) journal in a fixed position creates a lot of seeks; c) I love ext2, but my laptop crash a lot of time in a day (tests, battery and so on). Testing reiser4 is giving to me a good feeling with wondering logs. You know... less seek, less HD stress... so more responsiveness. Well, it's too early to express an opinion about R4 (I'm using it since last week), but the only way to test a FS is to use it for a long time. Sorry for my bad english, gelma [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1511 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-07 12:41 ` Andrea Gelmini @ 2006-01-07 14:03 ` Philippe Gramoullé 2006-01-09 18:22 ` Hans Reiser 1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Philippe Gramoullé @ 2006-01-07 14:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list Hello, On Sat, 7 Jan 2006 13:41:50 +0100 Andrea Gelmini <dislessico@gmail.com> wrote: | 2006/1/6, Robert Hulme <rob@robhulme.com>: | > | > http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz | > | > It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. | | | I really did not understand this kind of benchmark. I don't care which | filesystem is faster creating 10.000 files (something I never have to do). I | care about which filesystem fits better with my everyday use of my data. Well, i do care about which filesystem is faster creating 10.000 files : I happened recently to author a DVD under Linux using mplayer. For creating some menus, i had to (well mplayer had to) dump an mpeg file into jpegs , creating about 6000 pictures ( 4 titles with about 1500 pictures for each) (and deleting them afterwards of course) I do expect Reiser4 to be faster in the long run for such operations (large creates/deletes) even if that's not the case right now. I'm rather disappointed by the feeling this benchmark will give the average users : Reiser4 is either dog slow or far for being ready for prime time. Still, as Hans said, i think that some valuable things can be learnt from this benchmark and it will be good if this benchmark could be carefully reproduced by Namesys and other Reiserfs enthusiasts Thanks, philippe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-07 12:41 ` Andrea Gelmini 2006-01-07 14:03 ` Philippe Gramoullé @ 2006-01-09 18:22 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-09 19:01 ` Marcel Hilzinger 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-09 18:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andrea Gelmini, ReiserFS List Andrea Gelmini wrote: > > > 2006/1/6, Robert Hulme <rob@robhulme.com <mailto:rob@robhulme.com>>: > > http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz > > It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. > > > I really did not understand this kind of benchmark. I don't care > which filesystem is faster creating 10.000 files (something I never > have to do). I care about which filesystem fits better with my > everyday use of my data. > Days ago I wrote a few script trying to simulate a tipical desktop > session, *my* tipical desktop session. With different filesystem I've > got difference of minutes. That's a benchmark that mean something to me. > Why I'm trying/looking at reiser4? > Because: > a) seeks are the real problem of hd (they kill performance); > b) journal in a fixed position creates a lot of seeks; > c) I love ext2, but my laptop crash a lot of time in a day (tests, > battery and so on). > > Testing reiser4 is giving to me a good feeling with wondering logs. > You know... less seek, less HD stress... so more responsiveness. > Well, it's too early to express an opinion about R4 (I'm using it > since last week), but the only way to test a FS is to use it for a > long time. > > Sorry for my bad english, > gelma > reiser4 is normally very fast in creating 10,000 files. I suspect that there was simply error in how he did the test, and when the guys get back i will have someone try to reproduce his results. Justin made so many errors, I suspect he got something wrong here also. I encourage you guys to run your own tests, and you will see that we do fairly well I think. Advice when benchmarking is: make sure your fileset is much larger than RAM make sure the benchmark takes a while to run create your tarballs on the same fs you use them to benchmark (readdir order matters) Assume a 3% noise level. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 2006-01-09 18:22 ` Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-09 19:01 ` Marcel Hilzinger 2006-01-18 8:28 ` A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin Giovanni A. Orlando 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Marcel Hilzinger @ 2006-01-09 19:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list Am Montag, 9. Januar 2006 19:22 schrieb Hans Reiser: > Andrea Gelmini wrote: > > 2006/1/6, Robert Hulme <rob@robhulme.com <mailto:rob@robhulme.com>>: > > > > http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz > > > > It seems to come off fairly badly in most of the tests. > > > > > > I really did not understand this kind of benchmark. I don't care > > which filesystem is faster creating 10.000 files (something I never > > have to do). I care about which filesystem fits better with my > > everyday use of my data. > > Days ago I wrote a few script trying to simulate a tipical desktop > > session, *my* tipical desktop session. With different filesystem I've > > got difference of minutes. That's a benchmark that mean something to me. > > Why I'm trying/looking at reiser4? > > Because: > > a) seeks are the real problem of hd (they kill performance); > > b) journal in a fixed position creates a lot of seeks; > > c) I love ext2, but my laptop crash a lot of time in a day (tests, > > battery and so on). > > > > Testing reiser4 is giving to me a good feeling with wondering logs. > > You know... less seek, less HD stress... so more responsiveness. > > Well, it's too early to express an opinion about R4 (I'm using it > > since last week), but the only way to test a FS is to use it for a > > long time. > > > > Sorry for my bad english, > > gelma > > reiser4 is normally very fast in creating 10,000 files. I suspect that > there was simply error in how he did the test, and when the guys get > back i will have someone try to reproduce his results. I made some benchmarks for the german Linux-Magazin 6 month ago. Reiser4 on Suse Linux OSS was twice as fast as the next FS when copying the uncompressed kernel-sources. Either there was a bug in the version of reiser4 he used, or he did something completely wrong. If I have some free time, I will redo the benches with kernel 2.6.15 -- Üdvözlettel -- Mit freundlichen Grüssen, Marcel Hilzinger ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin ... 2006-01-09 19:01 ` Marcel Hilzinger @ 2006-01-18 8:28 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 17:40 ` Hans Reiser ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Giovanni A. Orlando @ 2006-01-18 8:28 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: reiserfs-list Hi, Looking the http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz article, I see that in some cases ReiserFS 3.X is better than Reiser4. Correct me if I am wrong. High numbers means poor, more delay. Now, because we plan to support both: Reiser3 and Reiser4 in our OS, we plan to know if there are some system the Reiser3 performance may become available for Reiser4. Reiser4 is superior but seems that with full security enabled logically the system may delay. Basically, my question may be re-posted like: "I know Reiser4 is different than Reiser3, but may the Reiser4 performance may be superior all the time, doing some update? Thanks, Giovanni. -- -- Check FT Websites ... http://www.futuretg.com - ftp://ftp.futuretg.com http://www.FTLinuxCourse.com http://www.FTLinuxCourse.com/Certification http://www.RPMParadaise.org http://www.GiovanniOrlando.com Fixed Europe: +39 0824 314 007. Global Mobile: +39 393 665 4239 (does not work if I am in Caracas). Global Venezuelan Mobile: +58 412 55 41 338. 'Life is ethernal ... and full of sex!' -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin ... 2006-01-18 8:28 ` A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin Giovanni A. Orlando @ 2006-01-18 17:40 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-18 18:43 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 18:21 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2006-01-18 20:17 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-18 17:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Giovanni A. Orlando; +Cc: reiserfs-list Giovanni A. Orlando wrote: > Hi, > > Looking the http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz article, I > see that > in some cases ReiserFS 3.X is better than Reiser4. > > Correct me if I am wrong. High numbers means poor, more delay. > > Now, because we plan to support both: Reiser3 and Reiser4 in our OS, > we plan to know if there are some system the Reiser3 performance > may become available for Reiser4. > > Reiser4 is superior but seems that with full security enabled > logically > the system may delay. > > Basically, my question may be re-posted like: "I know Reiser4 is > different than Reiser3, but may the Reiser4 performance may be > superior > all the time, doing some update? > > Thanks, > Giovanni. > Please understand that that benchmark was so poorly done that it will have to be repeated by us and fixed before it can have any diagnostic meaning at all. We may indeed learn things from it, but what we will learn we still have no idea of at this time. V3 is faster for highly synchronous workloads. V4 smokes it in pretty much all other measures. Given time, V4 will become fast at synchronous workloads. Hans ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin ... 2006-01-18 17:40 ` Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-18 18:43 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Giovanni A. Orlando @ 2006-01-18 18:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hans Reiser; +Cc: reiserfs-list Hans Reiser wrote: >Giovanni A. Orlando wrote: > > > >>Hi, >> >> Looking the http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz article, I >>see that >> in some cases ReiserFS 3.X is better than Reiser4. >> >> Correct me if I am wrong. High numbers means poor, more delay. >> >> Now, because we plan to support both: Reiser3 and Reiser4 in our OS, >> we plan to know if there are some system the Reiser3 performance >> may become available for Reiser4. >> >> Reiser4 is superior but seems that with full security enabled >>logically >> the system may delay. >> >> Basically, my question may be re-posted like: "I know Reiser4 is >> different than Reiser3, but may the Reiser4 performance may be >>superior >> all the time, doing some update? >> >>Thanks, >>Giovanni. >> >> >> > >Please understand that that benchmark was so poorly done that it will >have to be repeated by us and fixed before it can have any diagnostic >meaning at all. We may indeed learn things from it, but what we will >learn we still have no idea of at this time. > >V3 is faster for highly synchronous workloads. V4 smokes it in pretty >much all other measures. Given time, V4 will become fast at synchronous >workloads. > >Hans > > > Good! Thanks, Giovanni -- -- Check FT Websites ... http://www.futuretg.com - ftp://ftp.futuretg.com http://www.FTLinuxCourse.com http://www.FTLinuxCourse.com/Certification http://www.RPMParadaise.org http://www.GiovanniOrlando.com Fixed Europe: +39 0824 314 007. Global Mobile: +39 393 665 4239 (does not work if I am in Caracas). Global Venezuelan Mobile: +58 412 55 41 338. -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin ... 2006-01-18 8:28 ` A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 17:40 ` Hans Reiser @ 2006-01-18 18:21 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2006-01-18 18:39 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 20:17 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Vladimir V. Saveliev @ 2006-01-18 18:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Giovanni A. Orlando; +Cc: reiserfs-list Hello On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 08:28 +0000, Giovanni A. Orlando wrote: > Hi, > > Looking the http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz article, I > see that > in some cases ReiserFS 3.X is better than Reiser4. > > Correct me if I am wrong. High numbers means poor, more delay. > > Now, because we plan to support both: Reiser3 and Reiser4 in our OS, > we plan to know if there are some system the Reiser3 performance > may become available for Reiser4. > > Reiser4 is superior but seems that with full security enabled logically > the system may delay. > > Basically, my question may be re-posted like: "I know Reiser4 is > different than Reiser3, but may the Reiser4 performance may be superior > all the time, doing some update? > Unfortunately, currently, reiser4 is not yet superior all the time. There are some bottlenecks we are trying to fix these days. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin ... 2006-01-18 18:21 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev @ 2006-01-18 18:39 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Giovanni A. Orlando @ 2006-01-18 18:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Vladimir V. Saveliev, Reiserfs mail-list Vladimir V. Saveliev wrote: >Hello > >On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 08:28 +0000, Giovanni A. Orlando wrote: > > >>Hi, >> >> Looking the http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz article, I >>see that >> in some cases ReiserFS 3.X is better than Reiser4. >> >> Correct me if I am wrong. High numbers means poor, more delay. >> >> Now, because we plan to support both: Reiser3 and Reiser4 in our OS, >> we plan to know if there are some system the Reiser3 performance >> may become available for Reiser4. >> >> Reiser4 is superior but seems that with full security enabled logically >> the system may delay. >> >> Basically, my question may be re-posted like: "I know Reiser4 is >> different than Reiser3, but may the Reiser4 performance may be superior >> all the time, doing some update? >> >> >> > >Unfortunately, currently, reiser4 is not yet superior all the time. >There are some bottlenecks we are trying to fix these days. > > > OK! ... However this is problem for us. Until now, I don't look yet around in Reiser4 code, because too busy. However my previous comment: "Use Reiser3 code where is better" ... may work. I am sure that R4 is too different but logically may work! Thanks, Giovanni. -- -- Check FT Websites ... http://www.futuretg.com - ftp://ftp.futuretg.com http://www.FTLinuxCourse.com http://www.FTLinuxCourse.com/Certification http://www.RPMParadaise.org http://www.GiovanniOrlando.com Fixed Europe: +39 0824 314 007. Global Mobile: +39 393 665 4239 (does not work if I am in Caracas). Global Venezuelan Mobile: +58 412 55 41 338. -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin ... 2006-01-18 8:28 ` A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 17:40 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-18 18:21 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev @ 2006-01-18 20:17 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Vladimir V. Saveliev @ 2006-01-18 20:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: reiserfs-list Hello On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 08:28 +0000, Giovanni A. Orlando wrote: > Hi, > > Looking the http://linuxgazette.net/122/TWDT.html#piszcz article, I > see that > in some cases ReiserFS 3.X is better than Reiser4. > > Correct me if I am wrong. High numbers means poor, more delay. > > Now, because we plan to support both: Reiser3 and Reiser4 in our OS, > we plan to know if there are some system the Reiser3 performance > may become available for Reiser4. > > Reiser4 is superior but seems that with full security enabled logically > the system may delay. > > Basically, my question may be re-posted like: "I know Reiser4 is > different than Reiser3, but may the Reiser4 performance may be superior > all the time, doing some update? > Unfortunately, currently, reiser4 is not yet superior all the time. There are some bottlenecks we are trying to fix these days. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-01-18 20:17 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 17+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-01-06 18:10 Linux Gazette benchmark Reiser 4 Robert Hulme 2006-01-06 19:09 ` PFC 2006-01-06 20:15 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-08 22:07 ` Edward Shishkin 2006-01-09 11:04 ` Re[2]: " Pysiak Satriani 2006-01-09 19:50 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-10 7:57 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-07 12:41 ` Andrea Gelmini 2006-01-07 14:03 ` Philippe Gramoullé 2006-01-09 18:22 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-09 19:01 ` Marcel Hilzinger 2006-01-18 8:28 ` A question: May Reiser4 be equivalent to Reiser3 with some flag/plugin Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 17:40 ` Hans Reiser 2006-01-18 18:43 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 18:21 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev 2006-01-18 18:39 ` Giovanni A. Orlando 2006-01-18 20:17 ` Vladimir V. Saveliev
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