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  • Btrfs Picks Up Snappy Compression Support

    Phoronix: Btrfs Picks Up Snappy Compression Support

    New patches have been published for the Btrfs file-system that implement support for Google's Snappy compression algorithm, which promises to deliver better performance beyond LZO compression...

    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
    Just a positive comment about the article itself:

    - it doesn't contain personal opinions
    - it properly quotes and links to claims of others
    - it actually reads like news
    - isn't riddled with a metric ton of links to other phoronix articles

    When comparing this to todays FBSD9 article... is that written by the same Michael? More of this news reporting quality please.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by dhewg View Post
      When comparing this to todays FBSD9 article... is that written by the same Michael? More of this news reporting quality please.
      Just a matter of being awake for less than an hour at that time so not entirely burned out and while coffee is fresh in me.... (and that FreeBSD 9.0 article was written in comparison after like 16 hours of work yesterday and while having already written two articles and like 6 or 7 news posts.)
      Last edited by Michael; 13 January 2012, 12:29 PM.
      Michael Larabel
      https://www.michaellarabel.com/

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by dhewg View Post
        Just a positive comment about the article itself:

        - it doesn't contain personal opinions
        - it properly quotes and links to claims of others
        - it actually reads like news
        - isn't riddled with a metric ton of links to other phoronix articles

        When comparing this to todays FBSD9 article... is that written by the same Michael? More of this news reporting quality please.
        Fully agree.

        Originally posted by Michael View Post
        Just a matter of being awake for less than an hour at that time so not entirely burned out and while coffee is fresh in me.... (and that FreeBSD 9.0 article was written in comparison after like 16 hours of work yesterday and while having already written two articles and like 6 or 7 news posts.)
        Maybe you should sleep an hour more, and instead of churning out a mass of questionable content publish less, but well-written posts.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by AnonymousCoward View Post
          Maybe you should sleep an hour more, and instead of churning out a mass of questionable content publish less, but well-written posts.
          Not economical at this point...
          Michael Larabel
          https://www.michaellarabel.com/

          Comment


          • #6
            How good is PTS at benchmarking transparent filesystem compression? What kind of data is written to/read from disk when it does its thing? Text? Random? Multimedia? Straight zeroes? A mixture of all of the above?
            Last edited by loonyphoenix; 13 January 2012, 01:30 PM.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by loonyphoenix View Post
              How good is PTS at benchmarking transparent filesystem compression? What kind of data is written to/read from disk when it does its thing? Text? Random? Multimedia? Straight zeroes? A mixture of all of the above?
              Yeah it would be nice to have a real world type of benchmark. Anandtech analyzed it a while ago, and it's a large portion of 4K reads and writes, and then sequential data, all interleaved.



              Only 42% of all operations are sequential, the rest range from pseudo to fully random (with most falling in the pseudo-random category). Average queue depth is 4.625 IOs, with 59% of operations taking place in an IO queue of 1.

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              • #8
                I do not get why btrfs gets lots of mostly useless features when not even the really performance relevant issues are solved. It can not be that dpkg needs ages because of a fucked up fsync implementaion. such hacks like eatmydata do not work for chroot anyway...

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by dhewg View Post
                  Just a positive comment about the article itself:

                  - it doesn't contain personal opinions
                  - it properly quotes and links to claims of others
                  - it actually reads like news
                  - isn't riddled with a metric ton of links to other phoronix articles

                  When comparing this to todays FBSD9 article... is that written by the same Michael? More of this news reporting quality please.
                  Originally posted by Michael View Post
                  Just a matter of being awake for less than an hour at that time so not entirely burned out and while coffee is fresh in me.... (and that FreeBSD 9.0 article was written in comparison after like 16 hours of work yesterday and while having already written two articles and like 6 or 7 news posts.)
                  Originally posted by anonymouscoward View Post
                  Maybe you should sleep an hour more, and instead of churning out a mass of questionable content publish less, but well-written posts.
                  +1; less articles + better journalism >> many articles + poor journalism

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by FourDMusic View Post
                    +1; less articles + better journalism >> many articles + poor journalism
                    I've already said less articles is not viable in a business sense.
                    Michael Larabel
                    https://www.michaellarabel.com/

                    Comment

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