Mercurial > hg > nginx
view src/os/unix/ngx_freebsd.h @ 7668:0a04e5e4c40b
Large block sizes on Linux are now ignored (ticket #1168).
NFS on Linux is known to report wsize as a block size (in both f_bsize
and f_frsize, both in statfs() and statvfs()). On the other hand,
typical file system block sizes on Linux (ext2/ext3/ext4, XFS) are limited
to pagesize. (With FAT, block sizes can be at least up to 512k in
extreme cases, but this doesn't really matter, see below.)
To avoid too aggressive cache clearing on NFS volumes on Linux, block
sizes larger than pagesize are now ignored.
Note that it is safe to ignore large block sizes. Since 3899:e7cd13b7f759
(1.0.1) cache size is calculated based on fstat() st_blocks, and rounding
to file system block size is preserved mostly for Windows.
Note well that on other OSes valid block sizes seen are at least up
to 65536. In particular, UFS on FreeBSD is known to work well with block
and fragment sizes set to 65536.
author | Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 22 Jun 2020 18:02:58 +0300 |
parents | d620f497c50f |
children |
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/* * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc. */ #ifndef _NGX_FREEBSD_H_INCLUDED_ #define _NGX_FREEBSD_H_INCLUDED_ void ngx_debug_init(void); ngx_chain_t *ngx_freebsd_sendfile_chain(ngx_connection_t *c, ngx_chain_t *in, off_t limit); extern int ngx_freebsd_kern_osreldate; extern int ngx_freebsd_hw_ncpu; extern u_long ngx_freebsd_net_inet_tcp_sendspace; extern ngx_uint_t ngx_freebsd_sendfile_nbytes_bug; extern ngx_uint_t ngx_freebsd_use_tcp_nopush; extern ngx_uint_t ngx_debug_malloc; #endif /* _NGX_FREEBSD_H_INCLUDED_ */