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EXT4, Btrfs, NILFS2 Performance Benchmarks

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  • EXT4, Btrfs, NILFS2 Performance Benchmarks

    Phoronix: EXT4, Btrfs, NILFS2 Performance Benchmarks

    The past few Linux kernel releases have brought a number of new file-systems to the Linux world, such as with EXT4 having been stabilized in the Linux 2.6.28 kernel, Btrfs being merged into Linux 2.6.29, and most recently the NILFS2 file-system premiering with the Linux 2.6.30 kernel. Other file-systems have been introduced too during the past few Linux kernel release cycles, but these three have been the most talked about and are often looked at as being the next-generation Linux file-systems. Being the benchmarking junkies that we are, we have set out to compare the file-system performance of EXT4, Btrfs, and NILFS2 under Ubuntu using the Linux 2.6.30 kernel. We also looked at how these file-systems compared to EXT3 and XFS.

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    I guess the performance advantage of ext3 vs ext4 in some benches are due to ext3 defaulting to writeback data mode in 2.6.30 while ext4 still defaults to the slower and more secure ordered data mode, so that's not exactly a fair comparison.

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    • #3
      Does this test used btrfs v0.19 from Jun 2009?

      First of all, thanks for the great articles! Phoronix is great!

      Btrfs developers were aware of lower performance from older benchmarks articles, as acknowledged here: http://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org/index.p...e#Benchmarking

      They delivered one improvement on v0.19:
      "In general, v0.19 is a dramatic speed improvement over v0.18 in almost every workload."

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      • #4
        btrfs v0.19 is post-2.6.30

        ... so the benchmark probably didn't consider the latest v0.19 yet perhaps.

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        • #5
          when the database numbers are as far off as they are in this test it makes me suspect that the fsyncs are being ignored by some filesystems and not by others. none of these filesystems are so far apart in design (except for possibly nilfs) that a 20x-60x variation is reasonable.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by andre.goddard View Post
            ... so the benchmark probably didn't consider the latest v0.19 yet perhaps.
            No it didn't. Linux 2.6.31 will include btrfs v0.19+ and therefore the dramatic performance improvements.

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            • #7
              What's the point of benchmarking btrfs just before a major format change?

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              • #8
                Red capslock text and reiser4 propaganda... where have I seen that before?

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                • #9
                  Yay! It's the crazy Reiser fan!

                  I've missed their rantings.

                  Also: MY THOUGHTS ON TEH GREAT JFS AND EXT2 CONSPIRACIES

                  But seriously though, looking at that I have a few quesions:

                  1) Does this mean we should just stick with EXT3?? Surely not.
                  2) What about deleting large files (mythtv)? Is XFS still the daddy for your 3.5TiB XFS partition containing all my myth media and every file is >2GiB?

                  J1M.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by dlang View Post
                    when the database numbers are as far off as they are in this test it makes me suspect that the fsyncs are being ignored by some filesystems and not by others. none of these filesystems are so far apart in design (except for possibly nilfs) that a 20x-60x variation is reasonable.
                    You are probably right. Maybe this also explains why ZFS was 'slow' in SQLite in some previous Phoronix benchmark. As someone stated before such benchmarks will be more meaningful if we will see average CPU usage.

                    @Sleuth,

                    Get out of here with this bull....

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