On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 04:58:15PM -0400, Chris Mason wrote:
> > Assuming a 4 kbyte block size that would mean for a 1 Tbyte
> > filesystem:
> >
> > 1Tbyte / 4096 / 8 = 32 Mbyte of memory (this should of course
> > be saved to disk from time to time and be restored on startup).
> >
>
> Sorry, a 1TB drive is teeny, I don't think a bitmap is practical across
> the whole FS.
32Mbyte of memory is teeny too. You can pick up a server with 32Gb for
about $5k these days. Using 10% of that gives you room for 100Tb of
storage, which is getting to be a reasonable size. More than that and
you would be thinking of bigger machines anyway to have enough memory
for a decent cache.
(32Gb seems to be the nice price point, because 4Gb dimms are cheap as
chips, and 8Gb are way expensive. We're buying 32Gb machines at the
moment)
Bron ( ok, so I don't work with giant enterprise systems. I can see
that there are cases where this might suck, but memory seems
to be growing as fast as disk in the low end )
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