On Wed, Nov 14, 2007 at 12:32:45PM -0700, Andreas Dilger wrote:
quoted text > On Nov 14, 2007 11:32 -0500, Chuck Lever wrote:
> > I disagree: we don't need a "bullet-proof" log. We can get a significant
> > performance improvement even with a permanent dnotify log implemented in
> > user-space. We already have well-defined fallback behavior if such a log
> > is missing or incomplete.
> >
> > The problem with a permanent inotify log is that it can become unmanageably
> > enormous, and a performance problem to boot. Recording at that level of
> > detail makes it more likely that the logger won't be able to keep up with
> > file system activity.
> >
> > A lightweight solution gets us most of the way there, is simple to
> > implement, and doesn't introduce many new issues. As long as it can tell
> > us precisely where the holes are, it shouldn't be a problem.
>
> Jan Kara is working on a patch for ext4 which would store a recursive
> timestamp for each directory that gives the latest time that a file in
> that directory was modified. ZFS has a similar mechanism by virtue of
> doing full-tree updates during COW of all the metadata blocks and storing
> the most recent transaction number in each block. I suspect btrfs could
> do the same thing easily.
>
> That would allow recursive-descent filesystem traversal to be much more
> efficient because whole chunks of the filesystem tree can be ignored during
> scans.
The problem is that people may not be happy with the random behavior of
hardlinks, right?
--b.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in
the body of a message to
majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at
http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html