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Join Us for CPX 360
23-24 February 2021
Important certificate update to CloudGuard Controller, CME,
and Azure HA Security Gateways
How to Remediate Endpoint & VPN
Issues (in versions E81.10 or earlier)
IDC Spotlight -
Uplevel The SOC
Important! R80 and R80.10
End Of Support around the corner (May 2021)
Just wondering - whats the general feeling regarding R80.20 MDS file system for those who have upgraded from R80.10 and EXT3 - is the XFS filesystem faster and more efficient? We will be upgrading shortly from R80.10 (current take level) and were hoping for some increased performance in disk read/write.
My understanding is that XFS is well-suited for handling a large number of threads trying to access the disk path simultaneously (parallelized access via allocation groups ensures multiple threads can perform I/O simultaneously on the same volume). This is constantly the case on an SMS/MDS with incoming firewall logs being written, SOLR log indexing, SmartEvent correlation, security policy configuration-related postgres database operations, etc. XFS is also optimized for working with very large files (like postgres database extents) and works especially well with SSDs which are starting to become more and more common on Check Point appliances.
It is doubtful that a single dd I/O operation will reflect these XFS advantages.
Upgraded our MDSes a week ago. One thing definitely stands out - creating and restoring backups. Not only that backup size has reduced but also seems that disk read/write has much better performance at least in this area. 😎
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