On 7 Nov 2006, at 21:02, Michael Schuster wrote:
listman wrote:
hi, i found a comment comparing linux and solaris but wasn't sure
which version of solaris was being referred. can the list confirm
that this issue isn't a problem with solaris10/zfs??
Linux also supports asynchronous
Hello Paul,
Wednesday, November 8, 2006, 3:23:35 PM, you wrote:
PvdZ On 7 Nov 2006, at 21:02, Michael Schuster wrote:
listman wrote:
hi, i found a comment comparing linux and solaris but wasn't sure
which version of solaris was being referred. can the list confirm
that this issue isn't
On 8 Nov 2006, at 16:16, Robert Milkowski wrote:
Hello Paul,
Wednesday, November 8, 2006, 3:23:35 PM, you wrote:
PvdZ On 7 Nov 2006, at 21:02, Michael Schuster wrote:
listman wrote:
hi, i found a comment comparing linux and solaris but wasn't sure
which version of solaris was being
Paul van der Zwan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sure UFS and ZFS can be faster, but having fast, but possibly
dangerous, defaults
gives you nice benchmark figures ;-)
In real life I prefer the safe, but a bit slower, defaults, as should
anybody
who values his data.
There is another point
Robert Milkowski wrote On 11/08/06 08:16,:
Hello Paul,
Wednesday, November 8, 2006, 3:23:35 PM, you wrote:
PvdZ On 7 Nov 2006, at 21:02, Michael Schuster wrote:
listman wrote:
hi, i found a comment comparing linux and solaris but wasn't sure
which version of solaris was being referred.
Robert Milkowski wrote:
PvdZ This could be related to Linux trading reliability for speed by doing
PvdZ async metadata updates.
PvdZ If your system crashes before your metadata is flushed to disk your
PvdZ filesystem might be hosed and a restore
PvdZ from backups may be needed.
you can
Hello Matthew,
Wednesday, November 8, 2006, 5:31:28 PM, you wrote:
MA Robert Milkowski wrote:
PvdZ This could be related to Linux trading reliability for speed by doing
PvdZ async metadata updates.
PvdZ If your system crashes before your metadata is flushed to disk your
PvdZ filesystem
hi, i found a comment comparing linux and solaris but wasn't sure which version of solaris was being referred. can the list confirm that this issue isn't a problem with solaris10/zfs??"Linux also supports asynchronous directory updates which can make a significant performance improvement when
listman wrote:
hi, i found a comment comparing linux and solaris but wasn't sure which
version of solaris was being referred. can the list confirm that this
issue isn't a problem with solaris10/zfs??
Linux also supports asynchronous directory updates which can make a
significant