On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 02:23:25PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Tue, 1 May 2007 13:43:18 -0700
> "Cabot, Mason B" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I've been testing the NAS performance of ext3/Openfiler 2.2 against
> > NTFS/WinXP and have found that NTFS significantly outperforms ext3 for
> > video workloads. The Windows CIFS client will attempt a poor-man's
> > pre-allocation of the file on the server by sending 1-byte writes at
> > 128K-byte strides, breaking block allocation on ext3 and leading to
> > fragmentation and poor performance. This will happen for many
> > applications (including iTunes) as the CIFS client issues these
> > pre-allocates under the application layer.
>
> Oh my gawd, what a stupid hack. Now we know what the MS interoperability
> lab has been working on.
I wonder if they patented this technique as well, as well as one of
their dozen or so patents they are filing every day? "A Method of
Screwing Over Samba's Performance So that Windows Longhorn Can Compete
On Performance" coming soon, to a patent database near you! :-)
> > I've posted a brief paper on Intel's OSS website
> > (http://softwarecommunity.intel.com/articles/eng/1259.htm). Please give
> > it a read and let me know what you think. In particular, I'd like to
> > arrive at the right place to fix this problem: is it in the filesystem,
> > VFS, or Samba?
The right place is clearly Samba. I can't think of any other program
or filesystem protocol where writing a 1 byte write at 128k strides
would be used to signal a desire to do preallocation. In fact, it's
hard to think of a worse way of doing things.
- Ted
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