On Wed, 2004-05-19 at 09:59, Steven Cole wrote:
I went back through the archive to make sure, and since I didn't
specify where I did the timed tests, those timing tests would have
been done on my /home partition, which is reiserfs v3.
Since I was using different partitions for ext3 and reiserfs on
/dev/hda, a direct comparison between ext3 and reiserfs wouldn't
be completely fair, but a "watching the paint dry" observation
seemed to indicate that reiserfs was significantly faster for this
load. I did press my backup disk into service for this testing,
to eliminate the possibility that this was due to a finicky disk,
and I have a 3.9 G partition which I've formatted first reiserfs,
then ext3, so I could do some fair tests between reiserfs and
ext3 on that disk. But I think the results are already known;
reiserfs opens a can of whoopass for this kind of load.
While this is the kind of thing I like to hear, it wasn't really what I
was asking ;-)
There was a regression between a 2.6.3 mandrake kernel and 2.6.6, was
this regression just for reiserfs or was it for all filesystems?
If just reiserfs, it might be from the data=ordered and logging changes
that went into 2.6.6, so I'm quite interested in figuring things out.
-chris