[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] Xen domU filesystem best-practices question
On Wed, 25 Jul 2007, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote: Jeff Bachtel wrote:I've been using ext3 with little trouble. Ext3 has the advantage of coping, successfully, with 50,000 files in one directory without hiccup-ing, which ext2 always had trouble with.For file-backed disk images used for domUs, what is the current best-practice filesystem to use? That is, the filesystem with the fewest edge cases and failure modes. I was told (6 months back or so), to absolutely not use a journalled filesystem on a file-backed image, and so I started moving to ext2. Is this advice still pertinent, or would a journalled filesystem now be better (XFS or ext3, for instance). Thanks, Jeff I would assume the original suggestion was due to the journalling filesystem's requirement that the journal is written before the raw data. With a file-backed image I can imagine that the write ordering is at the discretion/mercy of the dom0 filesystem layer... whereas with a virtual block device it should be "as requested" by the domU. Could you give your domU's a small block device to use for the journal(s)? That said, I would expect the modern ext2 logic can handle all the ext3 options like dir_index (which should help with big directories) as long as they aren't journal related. All the above said, I'm not a developer, just an old sys-admin who likes to pretend he understands how things work :) -Tom _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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