When resizing an empty 21T file system to 28T, resize2fs was using this much CPU time and memory: 216.98user 19.77system 4:02.92elapsed 97%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 4485664maxresident)k 8inputs+1068680outputs (0major+800745minor)pagefaults 0swaps After this one-line change: 222.29user 0.49system 3:48.79elapsed 97%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 30080maxresident)k 8inputs+1068552outputs (0major+2497minor)pagefaults 0swaps An extra 14 seconds (+6%) of elapsed time to reduce the memory utilization from 4.2GB to 29MB seems like a fair trade. :-) For future work, the primary place where we are spending the most cpu time (from resize2fs -d 16) are these two places: blocks_to_move: Memory used: 2508k/25096k (1903k/606k), time: 91.42/91.53/ 0.00 and calculate_summary_stats: Memory used: 2508k/25612k (1908k/601k), time: 95.33/95.45/ 0.00 The calculate_summary_stats pass can be sped up by using ext2fs_find_first_{zero,set}_block_bitmap2(), instead of iterating over the entire block bitmap one bit at a time. The blocks_to_move pass can be sped up by using a bitmap to store the location of fs metadata blocks, to avoid an O(N**2) algorithm where N is the number of groups in the file system. The use of using rbtree bitmaps makes the above two optimizations possible, which will more than claw back the extra 14 seconds in CPU time. Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@xxxxxxx> --- resize/main.c | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) diff --git a/resize/main.c b/resize/main.c index e4b4435..ef2a810 100644 --- a/resize/main.c +++ b/resize/main.c @@ -318,6 +318,7 @@ int main (int argc, char ** argv) printf("%s", _("Couldn't find valid filesystem superblock.\n")); exit (1); } + fs->default_bitmap_type = EXT2FS_BMAP64_RBTREE; if (!(mount_flags & EXT2_MF_MOUNTED)) { if (!force && ((fs->super->s_lastcheck < fs->super->s_mtime) || -- 2.0.0 -- 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