In my experience softupdates brings the performance of ufs up from abysmal
up to close or equal to ext2. ext2 is more brittle than ufs with
soft updates. but you weren't planning on crashing it were you?
I think that real comparisons of filesystem performance/stability should
be made between lfs on freebsd and reiserfs/ext3/jfs on linux, given the
amount of disk and the number of objects that large caches tend to
handle...
joelja
On Tue, 30 Oct 2001, Eric Galarneau wrote:
>
> Hummmm.... I think FreeBSD may have a little advantage if "Soft updates" is
> enabled on the file system that contain the cache.
>
> Eric.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Vosburgh, Brian P, CTR, WHS/BB [mailto:bvosburgh@whs.mil]
> Sent: Monday, October 29, 2001 4:21 PM
> To: 'squid-users@squid-cache.org'
> Subject: [squid-users] Best OS for Squid?
>
>
> I finally received my server hardware for Squid. I've been testing on older
> hardware with RH Linux 7 but before I start installing for real I'm
> wondering if I would see better results with Solaris 8 or one of the BSD
> versions? The hardware we've got are two Dell Poweredge 2U units with
> 2x1000Ghz, 2GB RAM and RAID 0 Cheetahs.
>
> tia/
>
> Brian
>
-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Joel Jaeggli joelja@darkwing.uoregon.edu Academic User Services consult@gladstone.uoregon.edu PGP Key Fingerprint: 1DE9 8FCA 51FB 4195 B42A 9C32 A30D 121E -------------------------------------------------------------------------- It is clear that the arm of criticism cannot replace the criticism of arms. Karl Marx -- Introduction to the critique of Hegel's Philosophy of the right, 1843.Received on Tue Oct 30 2001 - 12:43:25 MST
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