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author | Nick Terrell <terrelln@fb.com> | 2022-10-17 13:32:37 -0700 |
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committer | Nick Terrell <terrelln@fb.com> | 2022-10-24 12:12:32 -0700 |
commit | 2aa14b1ab2c41a4fe41efae80d58bb77da91f19f (patch) | |
tree | 17f83bdf97a2a93f8d0aa4d5daf6a92caa7bde79 /lib/test_bits.c | |
parent | 4782c725c1538aa9ef894ae4a3938db40be7f02c (diff) | |
download | linux-2aa14b1ab2c41a4fe41efae80d58bb77da91f19f.tar.bz2 |
zstd: import usptream v1.5.2
Updates the kernel's zstd library to v1.5.2, the latest zstd release.
The upstream tag it is updated to is `v1.5.2-kernel`, which contains
several cherry-picked commits on top of the v1.5.2 release which are
required for the kernel update. I will create this tag once the PR is
ready to merge, until then reference the temporary upstream branch
`v1.5.2-kernel-cherrypicks`.
I plan to submit this patch as part of the v6.2 merge window.
I've done basic build testing & testing on x86-64, i386, and aarch64.
I'm merging these patches into my `zstd-next` branch, which is pulled
into `linux-next` for further testing.
I've benchmarked BtrFS with zstd compression on a x86-64 machine, and
saw these results. Decompression speed is a small win across the board.
The lower compression levels 1-4 see both compression speed and
compression ratio wins. The higher compression levels see a small
compression speed loss and about neutral ratio. I expect the lower
compression levels to be used much more heavily than the high
compression levels, so this should be a net win.
Level CTime DTime Ratio
1 -2.95% -1.1% -0.7%
3 -3.5% -1.2% -0.5%
5 +3.7% -1.0% +0.0%
7 +3.2% -0.9% +0.0%
9 -4.3% -0.8% +0.1%
Signed-off-by: Nick Terrell <terrelln@fb.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/test_bits.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions