| To: | GCS <gcs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: Comparing XFS with ext3 and ReiserFS |
| From: | Juha Saarinen <juha@xxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Date: | Mon, 7 May 2001 07:51:34 +1200 (NZST) |
| Cc: | "linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx" <linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx> |
| In-reply-to: | <20010506162223.A29723@sisinteli07.udg.es> |
| Sender: | owner-linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx |
On Sun, 6 May 2001, GCS wrote: > other files. On the other hand, XFS is lazy to allocate inodes, and only > get more (against free clusters to store the file itself) if it is > necessary. The only drawback as I know, that XFS never gives back these > inode clusters. This means, if you create millions of very small files, > and after you delete them, you see your disk storage size shrink. If that's correct, XFS would be less than ideal for e.g. a Squid or a news volume. -- Regards, Juha PGP fingerprint: B7E1 CC52 5FCA 9756 B502 10C8 4CD8 B066 12F3 9544 |
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