Over the past week there has been a lot of talk about the EXT4
file-system following the announcement that Google is migrating their
EXT2 file-systems to EXT4. Their reasons for this transition to EXT4 are
attributed to the easy migration process and Google engineers are
pleased with this file-system's performance. However, as we mentioned in
that news post last week and in many other articles over the past weeks
and months, EXT4 is not as great of a contender as it was in the past,
well, for some tests at least. The performance of the EXT4 file-system
commonly goes down with new kernel releases and not up, as kernel
developers continue to introduce new safeguards to address potential
data loss problems that initially plagued some EXT4 users. For our
latest EXT4 benchmarks we have numbers that show this file-system's
performance using a vanilla 2.6.28 kernel (when EXT4 was marked as
stable) and then every major kernel release up through the latest Linux
2.6.33 release candidate.
Read more at Phoronix.
The Performance Of EXT4 Then & Now
Posted on Wednesday, January 20 2010 @ 6:12 CET by Thomas De Maesschalck