I think I have a misconception of what copy on write in btrfs means for individual files. I had originally thought that I could create a large file: time dd if=/dev/zero of=10G bs=1G count=10 10+0 records in 10+0 records out 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 100.071 s, 107 MB/s real 1m41.082s user 0m0.000s sys 0m7.792s Then if I copied this file no blocks would be copied until they are written. Hence the two files would use the same blocks underneath. But specifically that copy would be fast. Since it would only need to write some metadata. But when I copy the file: time cp 10G 10G2 real 3m38.790s user 0m0.124s sys 0m10.709s Oddly enough it actually takes longer then the initial file creation. So I am guessing that the long duration copy of the file is expected and that is not one of the virtues of btrfs copy on write. Does that sound right? I was looking at a virtual machine solution and thought btrfs would be great if I could copy the vm disk to a new file at low cost and then launch that vm and customize it to my needs. OS Ubuntu 12.10 Mike Power -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 09:11:28AM -0800, Mike Power wrote:> I think I have a misconception of what copy on write in btrfs means > for individual files. > > I had originally thought that I could create a large file: > time dd if=/dev/zero of=10G bs=1G count=10 > 10+0 records in > 10+0 records out > 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 100.071 s, 107 MB/s > > real 1m41.082s > user 0m0.000s > sys 0m7.792s > > Then if I copied this file no blocks would be copied until they are > written. Hence the two files would use the same blocks underneath. > But specifically that copy would be fast. Since it would only need > to write some metadata. But when I copy the file: > time cp 10G 10G2 > > real 3m38.790s > user 0m0.124s > sys 0m10.709s > > Oddly enough it actually takes longer then the initial file > creation. So I am guessing that the long duration copy of the file > is expected and that is not one of the virtues of btrfs copy on > write. Does that sound right?You probably want cp --reflink=always, which makes a CoW copy of the file''s metadata only. The resulting files have the semantics of two different files, but share their blocks until a part of one of them is modified (at which point, the modified blocks are no longer shared). Hugo. -- === Hugo Mills: hugo@... carfax.org.uk | darksatanic.net | lug.org.uk == PGP key: 515C238D from wwwkeys.eu.pgp.net or http://www.carfax.org.uk --- "I don''t like the look of it, I tell you." "Well, stop --- looking at it, then."
> Then if I copied this file no blocks would be copied until they are written. > Hence the two files would use the same blocks underneath. But specifically > that copy would be fast. Since it would only need to write some metadata. > But when I copy the file: > time cp 10G 10G2cp without arguments still does a regular copy; btrfs does nothing to de-duplicate writes. "cp --reflink 10G 10G2" will give you the results you expect. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On 02/22/2013 09:16 AM, Hugo Mills wrote:> On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 09:11:28AM -0800, Mike Power wrote: >> I think I have a misconception of what copy on write in btrfs means >> for individual files. >> >> I had originally thought that I could create a large file: >> time dd if=/dev/zero of=10G bs=1G count=10 >> 10+0 records in >> 10+0 records out >> 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 100.071 s, 107 MB/s >> >> real 1m41.082s >> user 0m0.000s >> sys 0m7.792s >> >> Then if I copied this file no blocks would be copied until they are >> written. Hence the two files would use the same blocks underneath. >> But specifically that copy would be fast. Since it would only need >> to write some metadata. But when I copy the file: >> time cp 10G 10G2 >> >> real 3m38.790s >> user 0m0.124s >> sys 0m10.709s >> >> Oddly enough it actually takes longer then the initial file >> creation. So I am guessing that the long duration copy of the file >> is expected and that is not one of the virtues of btrfs copy on >> write. Does that sound right? > You probably want cp --reflink=always, which makes a CoW copy of > the file''s metadata only. The resulting files have the semantics of > two different files, but share their blocks until a part of one of > them is modified (at which point, the modified blocks are no longer > shared). > > Hugo. >I see, and it works great: time cp --reflink=always 10G 10G3 real 0m0.028s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.000s So from the user perspective I might say I want to opt out of this feature not optin. I want all copies by all applications done as a copy on write. But if my understanding is correct that is up to the application being called (in this case cp) and how it in turns makes calls to the system. In short I can''t remount the btrfs filesystem with some new args that says always copy on write files because that is what it already. Mike Power -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 11:41 AM, Mike Power <dodtsair@gmail.com> wrote:> On 02/22/2013 09:16 AM, Hugo Mills wrote: >> >> On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 09:11:28AM -0800, Mike Power wrote: >>> >>> I think I have a misconception of what copy on write in btrfs means >>> for individual files. >>> >>> I had originally thought that I could create a large file: >>> time dd if=/dev/zero of=10G bs=1G count=10 >>> 10+0 records in >>> 10+0 records out >>> 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 100.071 s, 107 MB/s >>> >>> real 1m41.082s >>> user 0m0.000s >>> sys 0m7.792s >>> >>> Then if I copied this file no blocks would be copied until they are >>> written. Hence the two files would use the same blocks underneath. >>> But specifically that copy would be fast. Since it would only need >>> to write some metadata. But when I copy the file: >>> time cp 10G 10G2 >>> >>> real 3m38.790s >>> user 0m0.124s >>> sys 0m10.709s >>> >>> Oddly enough it actually takes longer then the initial file >>> creation. So I am guessing that the long duration copy of the file >>> is expected and that is not one of the virtues of btrfs copy on >>> write. Does that sound right? >> >> You probably want cp --reflink=always, which makes a CoW copy of >> the file''s metadata only. The resulting files have the semantics of >> two different files, but share their blocks until a part of one of >> them is modified (at which point, the modified blocks are no longer >> shared). >> >> Hugo. >> > I see, and it works great: > time cp --reflink=always 10G 10G3 > > real 0m0.028s > user 0m0.000s > sys 0m0.000s > > So from the user perspective I might say I want to opt out of this feature > not optin. I want all copies by all applications done as a copy on write. > But if my understanding is correct that is up to the application being > called (in this case cp) and how it in turns makes calls to the system. > > In short I can''t remount the btrfs filesystem with some new args that says > always copy on write files because that is what it already.There''s no "copy a file" syscall; when a program copies a file, it opens a new file, and writes all the bytes from the old to the new. Converting this to a reflink would require btrfs to implement full de-dup (which is rather expensive), and still wouldn''t prevent the program from reading and writing all 10gb (and so wouldn''t be any faster). You can set an alias in your shell to make cp --reflink=auto the default, but that won''t affect other programs, nor other users. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On 02/22/2013 10:35 AM, cwillu wrote:> On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 11:41 AM, Mike Power <dodtsair@gmail.com> wrote: >> On 02/22/2013 09:16 AM, Hugo Mills wrote: >>> On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 09:11:28AM -0800, Mike Power wrote: >>>> I think I have a misconception of what copy on write in btrfs means >>>> for individual files. >>>> >>>> I had originally thought that I could create a large file: >>>> time dd if=/dev/zero of=10G bs=1G count=10 >>>> 10+0 records in >>>> 10+0 records out >>>> 10737418240 bytes (11 GB) copied, 100.071 s, 107 MB/s >>>> >>>> real 1m41.082s >>>> user 0m0.000s >>>> sys 0m7.792s >>>> >>>> Then if I copied this file no blocks would be copied until they are >>>> written. Hence the two files would use the same blocks underneath. >>>> But specifically that copy would be fast. Since it would only need >>>> to write some metadata. But when I copy the file: >>>> time cp 10G 10G2 >>>> >>>> real 3m38.790s >>>> user 0m0.124s >>>> sys 0m10.709s >>>> >>>> Oddly enough it actually takes longer then the initial file >>>> creation. So I am guessing that the long duration copy of the file >>>> is expected and that is not one of the virtues of btrfs copy on >>>> write. Does that sound right? >>> You probably want cp --reflink=always, which makes a CoW copy of >>> the file''s metadata only. The resulting files have the semantics of >>> two different files, but share their blocks until a part of one of >>> them is modified (at which point, the modified blocks are no longer >>> shared). >>> >>> Hugo. >>> >> I see, and it works great: >> time cp --reflink=always 10G 10G3 >> >> real 0m0.028s >> user 0m0.000s >> sys 0m0.000s >> >> So from the user perspective I might say I want to opt out of this feature >> not optin. I want all copies by all applications done as a copy on write. >> But if my understanding is correct that is up to the application being >> called (in this case cp) and how it in turns makes calls to the system. >> >> In short I can''t remount the btrfs filesystem with some new args that says >> always copy on write files because that is what it already. > There''s no "copy a file" syscall; when a program copies a file, it > opens a new file, and writes all the bytes from the old to the new. > Converting this to a reflink would require btrfs to implement full > de-dup (which is rather expensive), and still wouldn''t prevent the > program from reading and writing all 10gb (and so wouldn''t be any > faster). > > You can set an alias in your shell to make cp --reflink=auto the > default, but that won''t affect other programs, nor other users.Thanks for the help guys. I learned that if I want some application to support this behavior they must specifically choose to implement it. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html