On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 10:37:13PM -0700, prad wrote:
one of the neat things i've found about freebsd vs linux is the
'instantaneous' rm.
when you remove a large file or a substantial directory, freebsd does
it right away ard you get your prompt back, while with every linux i've
tried, you
prad p...@towardsfreedom.com writes:
one of the neat things i've found about freebsd vs linux is the
'instantaneous' rm.
when you remove a large file or a substantial directory, freebsd does
it right away ard you get your prompt back, while with every linux i've
tried, you wait and wait and
On Sat, 14 Mar 2009 11:02:48 -0400
Lowell Gilbert freebsd-questions-lo...@be-well.ilk.org wrote:
I've never noticed that large directory trees were instantaneous to
remove on any filesystem.
that's true too. even fbsd isn't really quick on large trees, but on
large files, i get to use my
On Thu 2009-03-12 22:37:13 UTC-0700, prad (p...@towardsfreedom.com) wrote:
one of the neat things i've found about freebsd vs linux is the
'instantaneous' rm.
when you remove a large file or a substantial directory, freebsd does
it right away ard you get your prompt back, while with every
I've been under the impression that this (fast deletes) had something
indeed. FreeBSD actually postpones free space bitmap update. after
deleting many gigs of files you'll see disk working after a while.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing
On Sat, 14 Mar 2009 20:34:39 +0100 (CET)
Wojciech Puchar woj...@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl wrote:
indeed. FreeBSD actually postpones free space bitmap update. after
deleting many gigs of files you'll see disk working after a while.
excellent!
so is this a freebsd thing or a ufs filesystem thing?
indeed. FreeBSD actually postpones free space bitmap update. after
deleting many gigs of files you'll see disk working after a while.
excellent!
so is this a freebsd thing or a ufs filesystem thing?
for sure FreeBSD implementation of UFS ;)
i'm not sure how about UFS on other OS.