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Date:      Fri, 21 May 1999 09:16:34 -0700
From:      Mike Smith <mike@smith.net.au>
To:        Mark Newton <newton@internode.com.au>
Cc:        pasha@sim.net.ua (Pavel Narozhniy), freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Source code of SGI XFS 
Message-ID:  <199905211616.JAA00959@dingo.cdrom.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Sat, 22 May 1999 00:21:54 %2B0930." <199905211451.AAA74303@gizmo.internode.com.au> 

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> Pavel Narozhniy wrote:
> 
>  > Does anybody heard about SGI releasing XFS source code?
> 
> Yup, they're doing it.
> 
> I would guess that FreeBSD would need a fairly thorough revamp of its
> handling of kernel memory allocation before XFS would be fully usable,
> though:  XFS buffer management is pretty full-on.

Read "Irix has shitty block I/O support so XFS has to do it all itself".

> The filesystem maintains its own pool of kernel buffers separate from
> the VM page cache which it uses for aggregating I/O transfers (so that
> if, say, you make 5 separate out-of-order I/Os which just happen to
> blanket a contiguous region of a disk object, XFS will collapse them
> into a single I/O;

We do this too; it's called I/O clustering, but it's done below the 
filesystem so that anyone and everyone can benefit from it.

> it'll also take small contiguous regions (extents)
> and remap them into the next-power-of-two extent size as they grow.

Whatever that means. 8)

> I know I could probably see by looking at the source, but does FreeBSD
> still impose a 64k limit on physical I/O operations?  That'll have
> to go too...

Nominally.  We ought to be able to support fragmentation as required to 
support the underlying device, but it's not complete yet.  The fixes 
are relatively trivial.

-- 
\\  The mind's the standard       \\  Mike Smith
\\  of the man.                   \\  msmith@freebsd.org
\\    -- Joseph Merrick           \\  msmith@cdrom.com




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