From: Valerie Henson <val_henson@linux.intel.com>
To: linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Choosing and tuning Linux file systems
Date: Sun, 25 Jun 2006 15:00:53 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20060625220052.GX19196@goober> (raw)
Hi folks,
I foolishly signed up to give a talk at OSCON in about a month about
choosing and tuning Linux file systems for different workloads. I
have some ideas about which file system to use when, but I'd rather
get recommendations from the experts on each file system. Below is a
straw man outline of my current recommendations, please take a look
and comment. I will make a summary freely available when I'm done.
At long last, I'll have an easy answer when someone asks me, "But
which file system should I use?" Answer: "Go read this web page..."
By the way, a lot of the data on file/fs limits and the like is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_systems
If it's wrong, please go check the page and update it if it's wrong.
Thanks!
Choosing a file system
Laptop: ext3 with noatime
General purpose server: ext3 or reiser
Lots of small files: reiser, ext2/3 with 1k blocks
More than ~32,000 files in one directory: XFS or reiser
Fast lookups in large directories: XFS, reiser, ext3 with htree (?)
File size more than 2TB: XFS, reiser up to 8TB
File system size more than 2TB: XFS, reiser up to 16TB
Ease of data recovery after corruption: ext2, ext3
Tuning a file system
Use "noatime" mount option
- atime makes read workloads into random write workloads, yuck
- This is Ubuntu installation default
- I have a report that mutt doesn't work with this because atime is
never updated but mtime is, maybe some kind of lazy atime is better?
- Don't do if you want to e.g., track down hackers
Choosing journaling mode in ext3
- Default is "ordered", usually the right choice
- "journal" is slower but guarantees data is on-disk as well
- "writeback" is faster but may result in garbage/security leaks in
your file data
Choosing block size
- You can do this at mkfs time
- tradeoff is space wasted vs. max file/fs size (other considerations?)
- limitation is system page size
Tuning reiser
- I know nothing!!! Help!
Choosing number of inodes
- XFS, reiser dynamically allocate inodes
- Default is fine unless you have LOTS of small files (or occasionally, only big files)
- mke2fs -T {news,largefile,largefile4}
Laptop mode
- I know almost nothing about this... some kind of write timeout?
-VAL
next reply other threads:[~2006-06-25 22:02 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 18+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-06-25 22:00 Valerie Henson [this message]
2006-06-25 22:13 ` Choosing and tuning Linux file systems Matthew Wilcox
2006-06-25 22:26 ` Arjan van de Ven
2006-06-26 7:22 ` Neil Brown
2006-06-26 9:04 ` Nate Diller
2006-06-27 18:46 ` Valerie Henson
2006-06-26 11:10 ` Erik Mouw
2006-06-26 12:36 ` ext2/3 subdirectory limit [WAS: Choosing and tuning Linux file systems] Tomas Hruby
2006-06-26 12:35 ` Arjan van de Ven
2006-06-26 12:54 ` Theodore Tso
2006-06-26 16:25 ` Andreas Dilger
2006-06-26 17:35 ` Chris Wedgwood
2006-06-26 21:03 ` Tomas Hruby
2006-06-26 21:03 ` Chris Wedgwood
2006-06-26 21:13 ` H. Peter Anvin
2006-06-26 12:59 ` Erik Mouw
2006-06-26 21:09 ` Tomas Hruby
[not found] ` <20060626091357.GQ5817@schatzie.adilger.int>
2006-06-26 22:01 ` Choosing and tuning Linux file systems Valerie Henson
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