You really don't want to fart with these values.  Performance will drop
off the cliff.

On Mon, Apr 04, 2011 at 09:11:55PM +0000, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> On Thu, 31 Mar 2011 12:46:06 +0200
> Otto Moerbeek wrote:
> 
> > > In general, the default values and algorithms for allocations could
> > > probably do with a tune-up, since of course today's disks are several
> > > magnitudes larger than only a few years ago (let alone than those that
> > > were around when the bulk of the file system code was written!), and the
> > > usage patterns are also in my experience often wildly different in a
> > > large file system than in a smaller one.  
> > 
> > We do that already, inode density will be lower for newly created
> > partitions, because diskalbel sets larger block and fragment sizes.
> 
> When creating filesystems with a partition containing many small files
> like one containing Maildirs. Is it a good idea during installation to
> set frag-size in disklabel to 1024 in order to automatically increase
> the number of inodes as oppose to simply using newfs -i 4096? Or would
> it reduce performance for larger files unnecessarily.
> 
> I was also expecting -g avgfilesize flag to affect the number of inodes
> but it doesn't and it is useable with tunefs. Would anyone mind
> telling me what affect it has?
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Kc

Reply via email to