Am Freitag 15 Juni 2007 schrieb Eric Sandeen:
> > I can try to reproduce the problem. Would be handy tough to have an
> > xfs_fsr that can be limited only to operate on a certain directory
> > and its files and sub directories. This way I could create a new
> > mailfolder, copy some mails in there, have it opened so that KMail
> > accesses the index file and let xfs_fsr only run on this mailfolder.
>
> From the man page:
>
> Files marked as no-defrag will be skipped. The xfs_io(8) chattr
> command with the f attribute can be used to set or clear this flag.
> Files and directories created in a directory with the no-defrag flag
> will inherit the attribute.
>
> so you can flag your mail directory or index files as no-defrag if you
> like. (I know this is the converse of what you wanted... but maybe
> helpful)
Hello Eric!
Well also from the man page as I just found out after sending my mail:
"xfs_fsr can be called with one or more arguments naming filesystems
(block device name), and files to reorganize. In this mode xfs_fsr does
not read or write /var/tmp/.fsrlast_xfs nor does it run for a fixed time
interval. It makes one pass through each specified regular file and all
regular files in each specified filesystem. A command line name
referring to a symbolic link (except to a file system device), FIFO, or
UNIX domain socket generates a warning message, but is otherwise
ignored. While traversing the filesystem these types of files are
silently skipped."
So maybe something along the lines of:
xfs_fsr ~/Mail/.trash.index
while it is open by KMail should be enough. I think I will give this a try
soon.
Regards,
--
Martin 'Helios' Steigerwald - http://www.Lichtvoll.de
GPG: 03B0 0D6C 0040 0710 4AFA B82F 991B EAAC A599 84C7
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