XFS is suitable for parallel workload, so I would pick ext4 for this case.
Here is a quote from https://access.redhat.com/articles/3129891 :
Another way to characterize this is that the Ext4 file system variants tend to 
perform better on systems that have limited I/O capability. Ext3 and Ext4 
perform better on limited bandwidth (< 200MB/s) and up to ~1,000 IOPS 
capability. For anything with higher capability, XFS tends to be faster. 


Best Regards,Strahil Nikolov

Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android 
 
  On Fri, Feb 5, 2021 at 2:42, Kenneth Porter<[email protected]> wrote:   
I'm setting up a CentOS 7 box as a BackupPC 4 server to back up Windows 
boxes on my LAN. I'm using an external 1.5 TB USB drive for the "pool". 
BackupPC deduplicates by saving all files in a pool, a directory hiearchy 
with each file named for the checksum of the file, and the directories 
acting as a hash tree to reach each pool file. A backup for a specific 
workstation is a directory tree of checksums and metadata that point into 
the pool for the actual file data. Incremental backups are reverse deltas 
from periodic "filled" backups of all files. I'm using rsyncd to pull 
changed files from the workstations.

I'm deciding which filesystem to use for my external drive. I'm thinking 
the main candidates are ext4 and xfs. What's the best filesystem for this 
application?

<https://github.com/backuppc/backuppc>

Repo for CentOS 7 users:

<https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/hobbes1069/BackupPC/>


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