EXT4 - then and now

K

kingrob

Guest
It's still new, so guess there will be a few "hickups".

We are running CentOS 5 at work & that still uses ext2 filesystem, I think.

Maybe Red Hat will one day decide it's time for ext3, nevermind 4. :p
 

Tinuva

The Magician
Joined
Feb 10, 2005
Messages
12,474
CentOS 5 actually uses EXT3 and that works just fine for now.

If you installed CentOS 5 with EXT2, its not CentOS or Redhat that is to blame, its the person who installed the server.


Code:
[root@svn ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release 
CentOS release 5.4 (Final)
[root@svn ~]# mount
/dev/md0 on / type ext3 (rw)
proc on /proc type proc (rw)
sysfs on /sys type sysfs (rw)
 
K

kingrob

Guest
CentOS 5 actually uses EXT3 and that works just fine for now.

If you installed CentOS 5 with EXT2, its not CentOS or Redhat that is to blame, its the person who installed the server.


Code:
[root@svn ~]# cat /etc/redhat-release 
CentOS release 5.4 (Final)
[root@svn ~]# mount
/dev/md0 on / type ext3 (rw)
proc on /proc type proc (rw)
sysfs on /sys type sysfs (rw)

That would be me!! :)

I dont like to customize server installs, especially not if I'm doing it for 30 servers.....and there must be a reason why the CentOS team choose ext2 and not 3.
 

milomak

Honorary Master
Joined
May 23, 2007
Messages
12,571
wow that's quite the performance hit. I think i'll be going back to 2.6.30 on my systems
 

s0lar

Executive Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2009
Messages
5,234
Yes I can agree, I see major degraded performance on EXT4 with large folder listing. Say more than 3000 files. Oh Hans Reiser you bastard, did you _have_ to kill your wife :(
 

VonPickle

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2008
Messages
350
Yes I can agree, I see major degraded performance on EXT4 with large folder listing. Say more than 3000 files. Oh Hans Reiser you bastard, did you _have_ to kill your wife :(

LOL, I agree, she couldn't have been that bad.

I have just stuck to old ext3 on all my servers, works just fine.
 

milomak

Honorary Master
Joined
May 23, 2007
Messages
12,571
Yes I can agree, I see major degraded performance on EXT4 with large folder listing. Say more than 3000 files. Oh Hans Reiser you bastard, did you _have_ to kill your wife :(

damn him :mad:
 

Tassidar

Expert Member
Joined
May 22, 2006
Messages
1,427
Yes I can agree, I see major degraded performance on EXT4 with large folder listing. Say more than 3000 files. Oh Hans Reiser you bastard, did you _have_ to kill your wife :(

The linux daemons, sent him the kill signal.
 

Tinuva

The Magician
Joined
Feb 10, 2005
Messages
12,474
Ah how I wish we had all our stuff on Solaris instead of Linux, ZFS is really that good.
 
K

kingrob

Guest
I just realised why I always thought CentOS was running on ext2 file system.

When you boot the OS, it says ext2fs, but then it also says Red Hat 5.19XXX something...and we know it's 5.4 .

Just checked system monitor & it is ext3. Humble apologies to all. :p
 

MyWorld

Executive Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2004
Messages
5,001
What troubles me is that you have to run ETX4 with the nobarrier option to get any sort of performance boost from newer kernels. This is an accident waiting to happen.

The most disturbing test results for me was the following:
Disk read performance for 2Gb files -
67MB/s between the Linux 2.6.28 and 2.6.30 kernels
36MB/s on the newer kernels

This will affect all desktop users of Linux, almost half the performance drop!
 

s0lar

Executive Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2009
Messages
5,234
Ah how I wish we had all our stuff on Solaris instead of Linux, ZFS is really that good.

Never had a "Argument list too long" on ZFS, super responsive filesystem but not a Solaris fan. And wont bastardize my Linux with non-gnu ZFS even if its userland FUSE.
 

milomak

Honorary Master
Joined
May 23, 2007
Messages
12,571
What troubles me is that you have to run ETX4 with the nobarrier option to get any sort of performance boost from newer kernels. This is an accident waiting to happen.

The most disturbing test results for me was the following:
Disk read performance for 2Gb files -
67MB/s between the Linux 2.6.28 and 2.6.30 kernels
36MB/s on the newer kernels

This will affect all desktop users of Linux, almost half the performance drop!

the reason why i said i am going to go back to 2.6.30 kernel
 
K

kingrob

Guest
Ok, then I will stay with my CentOS 32-bit desktop and ext3.

Was always grumpy that we didn't use the latest Ubuntu release for our desktops, but now I am actually a bit relieved.

Oh, and I put a new wallpaper on my CentOS desktop, much better now! I'm happy. Eish. :)
 

milomak

Honorary Master
Joined
May 23, 2007
Messages
12,571
are there any stats comparing this decreased performance to existing filesystems?
 
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