I've been testing Lukas' last 2 patches for e2fsck discard, and noticed something a little odd. If I make a 512M file, loopback mount it, and mkfs.ext4 it with discard, it uses about 17M at that point. If I then run fsstress on it with a known seed, then run e2fsck -E discard on it, it uses about 52M. If I repeat the above test telling mkfs.ext4 NOT to discard, I'm left with about 94M after the discarding e2fsck. So it seems that perhaps e2fsck is not discarding everything that it could; after a discarding fsck, we should be left with the same (minimal) nr. of blocks "in use" no? I guess that's better than discarding _more_ than it should though. ;) (I suppose it is possible that this is the underlying filesytem being selective about which discards it accepts, but it behaves the same way on ext4 and xfs backing filesystems) -Eric FWIW, sequence of events here, tested with and without "-K" on mkfs.ext4: dd if=/dev/zero of=fsfile bs=1M count=512 losetup /dev/loop0 fsfile mkfs.ext4 -F /dev/loop0&>/dev/null mount /dev/loop0 mnt/ /root/git/xfstests/ltp/fsstress -s 1 -d mnt/ -n 2000 -p 4 umount mnt/ e2fsck/e2fsck.static -fy -E discard /dev/loop0> fsck1.out || exit du -hc fsfile losetup -d /dev/loop0 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html