Post AaX5vaDWZI46mc4lAO by thomy2000@social.linux.pizza
 (DIR) More posts by thomy2000@social.linux.pizza
 (DIR) Post #AaX5vaDWZI46mc4lAO by thomy2000@social.linux.pizza
       2023-10-07T12:09:08Z
       
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       And THAT's why you use compression. This is the language server log from Neovim. It would take 114MB if not for compression which reduced it to a tiny 3.9MB!! Save space, save your SSD lifespan.#btrfs #linux #FileSystem #compression
       
 (DIR) Post #AaX5varw92OKnwz29o by selea@social.linux.pizza
       2023-10-07T16:43:57Z
       
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       @thomy2000 nice!is this a brtfs thing?
       
 (DIR) Post #AaX6tzqKQ9JndS285Q by thomy2000@social.linux.pizza
       2023-10-07T16:58:57Z
       
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       @selea Yes, it's the transparent compression thing. You set some stuff in your fstab and all of a sudden it compresses everything.
       
 (DIR) Post #AaX7vLujwinQKcJ7J2 by selea@social.linux.pizza
       2023-10-07T17:12:30Z
       
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       @thomy2000 Nice!!How is the performance with example - databases?
       
 (DIR) Post #AaXA7hv49mH9xlTkWW by thomy2000@social.linux.pizza
       2023-10-07T17:34:11Z
       
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       @selea I only use Linux for personal use so I don't know. It uses zstd compression which is known to be very fast. It will also depend on the amount of compression you apply. You can set the level in the filesystem table. You would have to test it with a database or ask someone who has hosted a database on compressed btrfs before.