It is scattered because the sequential writes skip used blocks. The "black holes" in the write worms are just blocks which are already taken (and valid).
@pascalgienger ah cool - cheers :) man this sure is an awesome video - been playing it on repeat for ages...
but is it just me, or does it always look like there's two write worms ? the first dotty one, skipping the used blocks, then a solid one shortly after that just obliterates everything.
is this to do with your specific data pattern, not zfs design ?
woooooow
OClockedManITA 1 year ago
what is that kind of scattered leader to all the writes ? is it prepping the disk ahead of the upcoming write or something ?
bobjandal 1 year ago
@bobjandal
It is scattered because the sequential writes skip used blocks. The "black holes" in the write worms are just blocks which are already taken (and valid).
pascalgienger 1 year ago
@pascalgienger ah cool - cheers :) man this sure is an awesome video - been playing it on repeat for ages...
but is it just me, or does it always look like there's two write worms ? the first dotty one, skipping the used blocks, then a solid one shortly after that just obliterates everything.
is this to do with your specific data pattern, not zfs design ?
copy on write seems like such a grand idea...
bobjandal 1 year ago
this is really cool
richard3667 2 years ago
Awesome video, Pascal!
zalez71 2 years ago