Re: [GIT PULL] ext4 updates for 3.9
From: Dave Chinner
Date: Thu Feb 28 2013 - 08:18:27 EST
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 02:29:07PM -0500, Theodore Ts'o wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 02:19:23PM -0500, Dave Jones wrote:
> >
> > Looks like it's fixed here too.
> >
> > How did this make it through -next without anyone hitting it ?
>
> > Is anyone running xfstests or similar on linux-next regularly ?
>
> I run xfstests on the ext4 tree, and I ran it on ext4 plus Linus's tip
> before I submitted a pull request. The problem is that XFSTESTS is
> S-L-O-W if you use large partitions, so typically I use a 5GB
> partition sizes for my test runs.
This isn't the case for XFS. I typically see 1TB scratch devices
only being ~10-20% slower than 10GB scratch devices, and 10TB only
being a little slower than 1TB scratch devices. I have to use sparse
devices and --large-fs for 100TB filesystem testing, so I can't
directly compare the speeds to those that I run on physical devices.
However I can say that it isn't significantly slower than using
small scratch devices...
> So what we probably need to do is to have a separate set of tests
> using a loopback mount, and perhaps an artificially created file
> system which has a large percentage of the blocks in the middle of the
> file system busied out, to make efficient testing of these sorts of
That's exactly what the --large-fs patch set I posted months ago does
for ext4 - it uses fallocate() to fill all but 50GB of the large
filesystem without actually writing any data and runs the standard
tests in the remaining unused space.
However, last time I tested ext4 with this patchset (when I posted
the patches months ago), multi-TB preallocation on ext4 was still too
slow to make it practical for testing on devices larger than 2-3TB.
Perhaps it would make testing 1-2TB ext4 filesystems fast enough
that you could do it regularly...
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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