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Date:      Thu, 20 May 1999 16:01:22 -0500
From:      David Kelly <dkelly@hiwaay.net>
To:        Eivind Eklund <eivind@FreeBSD.ORG>
Cc:        The Hermit Hacker <scrappy@hub.org>, freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: SGI, XFS and OSS? 
Message-ID:  <199905202101.QAA79579@nospam.hiwaay.net>
In-Reply-To: Message from Eivind Eklund <eivind@FreeBSD.ORG>  of "Thu, 20 May 1999 22:46:04 %2B0200." <19990520224604.H76043@bitbox.follo.net> 

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Eivind Eklund writes:
> On Thu, May 20, 1999 at 03:12:30PM -0500, David Kelly wrote:
> > The Hermit Hacker writes:
> > > 
> > > Just in case nobody has yet seen this...?
> > > 
> > > http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,36807,00.html?st.ne.fd.tohhed.ni
> > 
> > This is great news. My slowest SGI systems have faster metadata updates
> > than my fastest FreeBSD systems, same disk hardware.
> 
> Running soft updates?

Yup. But all measurements were seat-of-the-pants. Didn't much bother to
time things as at the time all that could do was to make me unhappy. An
SGI system could fly right thru tar'ing FreeBSD's ports tree, either on
read from tape or write to tape, where FreeBSD 3.1 with softupdates and
2.2.8 (without) can't keep the DDS-2 tape drive streaming (400k/sec).
10k blocksize in both cases.

At my now former employer, I kept /home/ncvs and /usr/ports hosted on an
SGI O2, 180MHz, 64MB RAM, and let the FreeBSD systems access via 10baseT
ethernet. Mostly because the SGI was where disk space was available.
Partly because it seemed faster.

Another good test of speed was "rm -rf /usr/ports". The O2 could do it 
so fast it was frightening.

--
David Kelly N4HHE, dkelly@nospam.hiwaay.net
=====================================================================
The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten percent of its
capacity -- the rest is overhead for the operating system.




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