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Date:      Fri, 25 Dec 2009 15:29:53 +0100
From:      patpro <patpro@patpro.net>
To:        Barry Pederson <bp@barryp.org>
Cc:        freebsd-fs@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: snapshot implementation
Message-ID:  <3ea87f5f62bb8ba30d798d4605a64c83@localhost>
In-Reply-To: <4B3283F2.7060804@barryp.org>
References:  <32CA2B73-3412-49DD-9401-4773CC73BED0@patpro.net> <alpine.GSO.2.01.0912231031450.1586@freddy.simplesystems.org> <4B3283F2.7060804@barryp.org>

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On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:56:18 -0600, Barry Pederson <bp@barryp.org> wrote:
> "...there's virtually no overhead at all due to the copy-on-write 
> architecture. In fact, sometimes it is faster to take a snapshot rather 
> than free the blocks containing the old data!"
> 
> That's certainly not the case with UFS snapshots, which can take a long 
> time to complete (we're talking freezing your machine's disk activity 
> for many minutes), and are limited to 20 total.


UFS uses copy on write. But you say many minutes to complete? Don't you
speak about dump(1), that uses snapshot as a basis to dump a live file
system?
I agree, UFS snapshot creation is not lightning-fast, but many minutes
seems a lot to me, and I never experienced such a long creation time.

patpro



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