Disk Performance Tuning
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Revision as of 11:58, 10 June 2007 by Root (talk | contribs) (DiskPerformanceTuning moved to Disk Performance Tuning)
Disk Performance Tuning
On my laptop I use EXT3. My fstab is setup for speed.
I turn off atime
and set the mode to journal_data_writeback.
The data consistency guarantees are the same as the ext2 file system.
This is still better than ext2 because file system integrity is maintained
continuously, so the file system is always consistent even after an unclean shutdown.
In other words, you made loose data, but you won't have bad data.
# /dev/sda1 UUID=d4769677-d2a9-4d87-9165-fc44760495bc / ext3 defaults,errors=remount-ro,noatime,data=writeback 0 1
Older systems might use the /dev/hda1 notation (if upgrading you can get the UUID using the vol_id /dev/hda1
command):
/dev/hda1 / ext3 defaults,errors=remount-ro,noatime,data=writeback 0 1
Before you reboot run:
tune2fs -o journal_data_writeback /dev/sda1