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bees/scripts/beesd.conf.sample

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## Config for Bees: /etc/bees/beesd.conf.sample
## https://github.com/Zygo/bees
## It's the default values, change them if needed.
# How to use?
# Copy this file to a new file name and adjust the UUID below.
# Note: To find the UUID of the btrfs disks: `lsblk -f`
# Which file system will be used?
UUID=xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
## System Vars
# Change carefully
# WORK_DIR=/run/bees/
# MNT_DIR="$WORK_DIR/mnt/$UUID"
# BEESHOME="$MNT_DIR/.beeshome"
# BEESSTATUS="$WORK_DIR/$UUID.status"
## Options to apply, see also `beesd --help`
## Load management options:
# -c, --thread-count Worker thread count (default CPU count * factor)
# -C, --thread-factor Worker thread factor (default 1)
# -G, --thread-min Minimum worker thread count (default 0)
# -g, --loadavg-target Target load average for worker threads (default none)
# --throttle-factor Idle time between operations (default 1.0)
## Filesystem tree traversal options:
# -m, --scan-mode Scanning mode (0..4, default 4)
## Workarounds (the workaround-btrfs-send was needed < 5.4.4 Linux kernel)
# -a, --workaround-btrfs-send Workaround for btrfs send
# (ignore RO snapshots)
## Logging options:
# -t, --timestamps Show timestamps in log output (default)
# -T, --no-timestamps Omit timestamps in log output
# -p, --absolute-paths Show absolute paths (default)
# -P, --strip-paths Strip $CWD from beginning of all paths in the log
# -v, --verbose Set maximum log level (0..8, default 7)
# Use these options to reduce journal entries:
# OPTIONS="--strip-paths --no-timestamps --verbose 7"
# For more debugging messages and as a first approach:
OPTIONS="--verbose 8"
## Bees DB size
# Hash Table Sizing
# sHash table entries are 16 bytes each
# (64-bit hash, 52-bit block number, and some metadata bits)
# Each entry represents a minimum of 4K on disk.
# unique data size hash table size average dedupe block size
# 1TB 4GB 4K
# 1TB 1GB 16K
# 1TB 256MB 64K
# 1TB 16MB 1024K
# 64TB 1GB 1024K
#
# Size MUST be multiple of 128KB
# DB_SIZE=$((1024*1024*1024)) # 1G in bytes