Re: [ANN] Squashfs 3.0 released

From: Phillip Lougher
Date: Tue Mar 21 2006 - 10:59:24 EST


Pavel Machek wrote:
On Fri 17-03-06 12:25:44, Jeff Garzik wrote:
I have two routers, ADM5120-based Edimax and LinkSys WRT54G v5, both of which have a mere 2MB of flash, and both use SquashFS to maximize that space. And both are el cheapo, slow embedded processors that run far slower than 300Mhz. I look askance at anyone who wants to make an arbitrary filesystem design decision imposing tons of bytesex upon these lowly devices.


gzip is already pretty expensive, I'd say. Is not byteswap lost in
noise?


Perhaps, but almost all the byteswap is performed on the metadata side, reading directories and inodes, where nearly every byte will need to be swapped. As inodes are compacted and compressed in 8 KB blocks, and are on average 15 bytes in size, for each 8 KB decompress you're potentially doing 8192/15 inode byteswaps. This is probably sufficent to affect directory search and lookup on a slow processor.

The data path is all gzip overhead (64K datablocks), there is no byteswap taking place except for the block size integer. Therefore byteswap doesn't have any affect on reading data.

Phillip
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