I have been doing some experiments with XFS on my "hot new desktop system," and
I have turned up an interesting bit of info. (Note: My system is an AMD64 X2
2.5GHz running Linux.)
When I mount an XFS volume (thus loading the xfs kernel module), the kernel
spawns two CPU-bound threads for "xfslogd" and "xfsdatad". However, it appears
that only one of each of these kernel processes is getting any load, as
indicated by "ps ax":
3700 ? S< 0:00 [xfslogd/0]
3701 ? S< 0:19 [xfslogd/1]
3702 ? S< 0:00 [xfsdatad/0]
3703 ? D< 0:05 [xfsdatad/1]
For each of these kernel threads, only those on CPU #2 are actually pulling
notable load. Why is this?
I understand that I may have overlooked some critical tidbit of info in the man
pages, or perhaps I have not yet found something online that could explain a
default limitation. If so, I would very much enjoy new information about using
XFS on a desktop system.
TYIA for your answer(s).
--
Mark
"What better place to find oneself than
on the streets of one's home village?"
--Capt. Jean-Luc Picard, "Family"
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