Displaying 7 results from an estimated 7 matches for "size_in_bytes".
2007 Dec 04
0
[ANNOUNCE] Btrfs v0.9
...the btree) file data larger than the
page size. Any file smaller than a btree block will probably be backed
into the btree.
* Xattr support (no ACLs yet) from Josef Bacik. This works for generic
user xattrs and was tested with beagle among other things.
* Stripe size parameter to mkfs.btrfs (-s size_in_bytes). Extents will
be aligned to the stripe size for performance.
* Many performance and stability fixes, especially on 32 bit x86
machines.
Unfixed:
ENOSPC handling. Things are much more predicable now, and
Btrfs will work up until the disk is very close to full.
Concurrency: Everything is still...
2007 Dec 04
0
[ANNOUNCE] Btrfs v0.9
...the btree) file data larger than the
page size. Any file smaller than a btree block will probably be backed
into the btree.
* Xattr support (no ACLs yet) from Josef Bacik. This works for generic
user xattrs and was tested with beagle among other things.
* Stripe size parameter to mkfs.btrfs (-s size_in_bytes). Extents will
be aligned to the stripe size for performance.
* Many performance and stability fixes, especially on 32 bit x86
machines.
Unfixed:
ENOSPC handling. Things are much more predicable now, and
Btrfs will work up until the disk is very close to full.
Concurrency: Everything is still...
2011 May 14
0
data alignment for SSD: Stripe size or sector size given with -s?
Hi!
> [ANNOUNCE] Btrfs v0.9
> [...]
> * Stripe size parameter to mkfs.btrfs (-s size_in_bytes). Extents will
> be aligned to the stripe size for performance.
> [...]
http://fixunix.com/kernel/258991-[announce]-btrfs-v0-9-a.html
versus
> -s, --sectorsize size
> Specify the sectorsize, the minimum block allocation.
(man mkfs.btrfs with btrfs-tools 0.19+201...
2006 Dec 21
6
Rails'' send_file, Mongrel, and *gasp* memory
I''ve had a right fun few days at work trying to figure out why our Rails
app (which isn''t under very heavy load) kept eating memory and bringing
our server to our knees. Eventually I traced it to send_file (which was
in a way a relief as it wasn''t down to my coding ;) -- every time a user
started downloading, the memory consumed by the app would jump, and
2015 Apr 12
2
[LLVMdev] Looking for advice on how to debug a problem with C++ style exception handling code that my compiler generates.
Logan,
How would I dump the object file generated by the JIT compiler pipeline?
Could you point me to an example of how something like that is done? I’m used to working with the JIT machinery in memory but not writing object files out to disk.
I’m have code to generate object files for AOT compilation - is it done the same way?
Best,
.Chris.
On Apr 12, 2015, at 2:27 PM, Logan Chien
2012 Nov 29
2
[LLVMdev] problem trying to write an LLVM register-allocation pass
I have a new problem: Register RBP is used in a function foo. (I am not
allocating RBP to any virtual register, the instances of RBP in function
foo are in the machine code when my register allocator starts.)
Function foo calls function bar. Register RBP is not saved across the
call, though it is live after the call. Function bar includes a virtual
register. The code that I'm using to
2012 Dec 01
0
[LLVMdev] problem trying to write an LLVM register-allocation pass
...++dataline % 10 == 0 )
outc( '\n' );
datapos = 0;
}
}
void *yy_flex_xmalloc( size )
int size;
{
void *result = flex_alloc( (size_t) size );
if ( ! result )
flexfatal(
("memory allocation failed in yy_flex_xmalloc()") );
return result;
}
void zero_out( region_ptr, size_in_bytes )
char *region_ptr;
size_t size_in_bytes;
{
register char *rp, *rp_end;
rp = region_ptr;
rp_end = region_ptr + size_in_bytes;
while ( rp < rp_end )
*rp++ = 0;
}
int dupmachine (int);
void mkxtion (int, int);
void add_accept( mach, accepting_number )
int mach, accepting_number;
{
if ( t...