On Sun, 15 Mar 2015, peer.loz@xxxxxxx wrote: > Following common recommendations [1], I use these mount options on my > main developing machine: noatime,autodefrag. This is desktop machine and > it works well so far. Now, I'm also going to install several KVM virtual > machines on this system. I want to use qcow2 files stored on SSD with a > btrfs on it. In order to avoid bad performance with the VMs, I want to > disable the Copy-On-Write mechanism on the storage directory of my VM > images as for example described in [2]. Why do you expect a great performance benefit from that? As there is no real seek time SSDs probably won't give you much benefit from defragmenting. As for disabling CoW, that will reduce the number of writes (as you don't need to write the metadata all the way up the tree) and improve performance, but not as much as on spinning media where you need to do seeks for all that. Finally having checksums on everything to give the possibility of recognising corrupt data is a really good feature and something that you want on your VM images. So far I have never even tried disabling CoW or using auto defragment. All of my BTRFS filesystems have either low performance or run on SSD. -- My Main Blog http://etbe.coker.com.au/ My Documents Blog http://doc.coker.com.au/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
