> > > > Two more things: > > /var/guix/db should probably have CoW disabled, as should /tmp > > I haven't bothered and my system seems to be doing OK. When I asked in > #btrfs, people told me to keep CoW unless I was really sure it was a > problem (i.e., run benchmarks), as it implies loosing the checksum > validation and compression. The command 'man 5 btrfs' also states that > "Updates in-place improve performance for workloads that do frequent > overwrites, at the cost of potential partial writes, in case the write > is interrupted (system crash, device failure).", which doesn't sound > safe to do for something as important as /var/guix/db. Fair enough. I had heard that the CoW stuff wasn't great for databases. I thought Leo ran into some issues with CoW on /tmp with the syncthing tests. > > would the deduplication of btrfs be "better" than the deduplication from > > the daemon? > > On my system (with zstd compression), compsize -x /gnu/store suggests > a resounding yes: > > --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- > sudo compsize -x /gnu/store > Processed 3479664 files, 954748 regular extents (3002677 refs), 1451082 inline. > Type Perc Disk Usage Uncompressed Referenced > TOTAL 57% 51G 88G 217G > none 100% 32G 32G 81G > zstd 33% 18G 56G 135G > --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- > > The delta between the Uncompressed and Referenced column is attributed > to the deduplication done by Btrfs, and provides massive space savings > in my case (this is just for /gnu/store). > > I'd need 217 GiB over a traditional fs such as EXT4 to hold my current > store, while an uncompressed Btrfs partition would use only 88 GiB. > With zstd compression, it's down to 51 GiB, or less that a quarter of > what would have been required using EXT4. I always understood that as with compression you're using 51G instead of 88G, and because of deduplication from the daemon it would only be 88G instead of 217G. I took the numbers from 'none' to mean that the daemon itself already did a lot of deduplication. -- Efraim Flashner אפרים פלשנר GPG key = A28B F40C 3E55 1372 662D 14F7 41AA E7DC CA3D 8351 Confidentiality cannot be guaranteed on emails sent or received unencrypted