| To: | yoros@xxxxxxxxxx |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: About removing files |
| From: | Chris Wedgwood <cw@xxxxxxxx> |
| Date: | Fri, 25 Oct 2002 01:33:09 -0700 |
| Cc: | linux-xfs <linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx> |
| In-reply-to: | <20021025051820.GA22414@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| References: | <20021024220639.GA20279@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <1035497418.31455.13.camel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20021024225614.GA20660@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20021024231656.GA19254@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20021025051820.GA22414@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Sender: | linux-xfs-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxx |
| User-agent: | Mutt/1.4i |
On Fri, Oct 25, 2002 at 07:18:20AM +0200, yoros@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > My intention is to know why this situations may happend and why XFS > is slow deleting files and directories. *If* the filesystem gets very full, files will tend to become fragmented. This is not unique to XFS. > Well, if anybody has time to explain me this methods... How full was your filesystem? Has it every been completely full? I ask this because many people I've dealt with with badly fragmented filesystems have had completely full filesystems... in such cases, things are going to fragment or fail. --cw |
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