Minutes01-17-2007
From Ext4
Ext4 Developer Interlock Call: 01-17-07 Minutes
Attendees: Mingming Cao, Dave Kleikamp, Jean Pierre Dion, Jean Noel Cordenner, Valerie Clement, Suparna Bhattacharya, Eric Sandeen, Avantika Mathur
Minutes can be accessed at: http://ext4.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Ext4_Developer%27s_Conference_Call
- In the last call Ted proposed having a git tree for ext4 on kernel.org, and Mingming then sent an email to the list requesting everyone to resend latest versions of ext4 patches to put in these tree. Mingming suggested that all bug fixes to ext4 should also be copied to the git tree
- Eric asked if people would be interested if ext4 built better as module. First by perhaps moving some ext4 headers from include/linux to the ext4 directory; making it easier to build as a module
- Online Defragmentation: Takashi posted updated patches to the mailing list. Mingming updated the ext4 wiki with status. Andreas and Takashi have been discussing what the interface for online defragmentation should be. The next step is to wait for a new patch set from Takashi, as there are some to do items.
- Preallocation: Amit Arora posted new patch set, Mingming reviewed the patches and they look good.
- The main outstanding issue is determining what the interface should be: ioctl, fcntl, ftruncate, posix_fallocate. ** Eric does not want to use ftruncate as it does not support creating sparse files.
- Mingming asked if the return value should be how many blocks were allocated, because when allocating accross holes, it may not allocate number of blocks requested. Eric did not see allocation accross holes to be a common case, and was not sure if the number of blocks allocated will be useful. Eric will check how XFS handles this situation, it could be helpful to try to keep semantics similar accross filesystems.
- Support for trillions of files in ext4: Mingming asked how XFS handles a 64 bit inode number and binary incompatability issues.
- XFS by default limits the inode number to 32 bit range; but can be configured for 64 bit inode numbers. Eric suggested that as a filesystem that is moving forward, ext4 could default to 64 bit inodes, but be set to 32 bit inode if necesary.
- Eric also mentioned looking at the scaling of mkfs block/inode ratio based on filesystem size
- fsck time on very large number of files is also an issue
- Mingming discussed the limitation on filesystem size by the fact that all block group descriptors are stored in the first block; this limits max filesystem size to 256 TB. We could enlarge the block group size to store more block group descriptors or not store all descriptors in the same block group. If meta block groups are turned on by default, this limit could be resolved, but all peices for this feature may not be in place.
- Encourage developers to update the ext4 wiki (ext4.wiki.kernel.org), new patches page with details and status on features, It might be helpful if there is a separate page on the WIKI for each feature.