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What filesystem do you use?
Posted: 2003-10-28 05:27pm
by Pu-239
Which filesystem do you use (any OS, yes I kno)? Which do you think is faster?
Specify OS, version, filesystem types, and modifications from default such as patches to use ACLs under Linux.
Posted: 2003-10-28 05:29pm
by Vendetta
My system has both FAT32 and NTFS partitions.
Because I dual boot between XP, for general use and 98, for the sake of some old games, and a partition that needs to be available to both.
Posted: 2003-10-28 05:39pm
by Shinova
NTFS.
Posted: 2003-10-28 05:40pm
by Faram
NTFS
I dislike FAT16/32 with a passion.
NTFS is not much better but atleast it is an inprovement over fat.
Posted: 2003-10-28 05:53pm
by Embracer Of Darkness
NTFS.
Posted: 2003-10-28 06:50pm
by phongn
NTFS on Windows
Ext3 for my boot and home partitions in Linux, XFS for everything else.
Posted: 2003-10-28 07:02pm
by Howedar
FAT32
Posted: 2003-10-28 08:50pm
by Durandal
HFS Extended.
Posted: 2003-10-28 09:16pm
by BrYaN19kc
NTFS (the only way to go!
)
Posted: 2003-10-28 09:33pm
by Pu-239
phongn wrote:NTFS on Windows
Ext3 for my boot and home partitions in Linux, XFS for everything else.
You use XFS? Isn't it supposed to be slightly flaky? And performance advantage is exaggerated- mostly useful for large files. For many many many small files, ReiserFS is supposed to be better (it's meant for people storing stuff in many flat text files instead of a database).
Damn bastard, has a better FS then I do... oh well, wait few months to upgrade to Reiser4, besides ReiserFS is technologically superior, despite slightly slower performance
I have my windows stuff on a 10GB FAT32 partion, with Linux on 29.2GB ReiserFS, and swap on 0.8GB. I do not seperate the root directories into seperate partitions, since it is impossible to foresee future needs and I don't nuke my linux installation every few months unlike users of certain distributions, and LVM probably has poorer performance (I had to resize my ReiserFS partition twice due to lack of space on Windows, from 0 to 5 to 10.
I do not trust dynamic discs on Linux despite nothing indicating it is unstable, since it's been reverse engineered. And why do you have a boot partition for, what, a maximum of 10 megs, and usually not even that (the only reason for my system being that way is the 3-4 kernel images and related files for each I have on my /boot)?
I do not have an NTFS partition, since I want R/W access to all my files from Linux, and stuff on Windows isn't important anyway, not to mention I haven't run Windows on this computer for about 3 weeks.
BTW, no such thing as NTSF
.
Posted: 2003-10-28 09:53pm
by phongn
Pu-239 wrote:You use XFS? Isn't it supposed to be slightly flaky? And performance advantage is exaggerated- mostly useful for large files. For many many many small files, ReiserFS is supposed to be better (it's meant for people storing stuff in many flat text files instead of a database).
I find ReiserFS more flakey, and it undergoes such major changes at times to be annoying. SGI's XFS is more reliable for me.
Posted: 2003-10-28 10:15pm
by Vertigo1
OS: WinXP SP1a
File system: NTFS (because FAT anything SUCKS!)
Posted: 2003-10-29 02:36am
by MKSheppard
NTFS on the main hard drive, FAT32 on the secondary, because
the secondary stores all my importat stuff, and I want it to be
accessible to anything
Posted: 2003-10-29 02:39am
by Crayz9000
Several small Fat32 partitions for storing things such as Windows 98 and documents that I use in both Windows and Linux; two NTFS partitions, one for Windows 2000 and one for the programs I use under that, and finally several Ext3 partitions for Linux. (Fragmentation? What's that?
)
Posted: 2003-10-29 03:20am
by Drooling Iguana
FAT32 and ReiserFS.
I don't use Windows for anything other than games, so I saw no need to run a version more recent than '98.
I miss HPFS, though.
Posted: 2003-10-29 01:06pm
by RedImperator
I put them in little folders.
Posted: 2003-10-29 03:03pm
by Spanky The Dolphin
Also uses the little magic folders.
Posted: 2003-10-29 10:34pm
by Exonerate
NTFS and FAT32.
Posted: 2003-10-30 04:40am
by His Divine Shadow
One FAT16 boot partition that has this 5 year old copy of Windows NT on it, it's survived several hardrives and computers and it's still going, I use it as my emergency OS incase some of the others won't boot or somesuch.
Then I got 2 NTFS partitions, I recently removed FreeBSD since I never ever use it.
Posted: 2003-10-30 08:38am
by Psycho Smiley
Ok, serious question for you WinXP experts:
I'm running XP Pro using FAT32 (it came that way) but am thinking about converting to NTFS. I've heard the official pros and cons from Microsoft, and none of the warnings apply to me. Are there any other ones that I need to know about? And will the benefits be noticeable?
Posted: 2003-10-30 09:14am
by Faram
Psycho Smiley wrote:Ok, serious question for you WinXP experts:
I'm running XP Pro using FAT32 (it came that way) but am thinking about converting to NTFS. I've heard the official pros and cons from Microsoft, and none of the warnings apply to me. Are there any other ones that I need to know about? And will the benefits be noticeable?
Not really the bigest con IMHO is that you can't access the NTFS disk wo 3rd party stuff once it is ntfs.
Othervise follow the standard rules for any installation/modification.
Backup your stuff.
Posted: 2003-10-30 11:03am
by Xon
Psycho Smiley wrote:Ok, serious question for you WinXP experts:
I'm running XP Pro using FAT32 (it came that way) but am thinking about converting to NTFS. I've heard the official pros and cons from Microsoft, and none of the warnings apply to me. Are there any other ones that I need to know about? And will the benefits be noticeable?
FAT32 sucks, and sucks unbelievable hard.
For one, NTFS is much better at surviving an unexpected shutdown than FAT32.
And more importantly of all, you can implement filesystem level security settings.
The 'simple' security & file sharing mode is actualy useful if you dont know what you are doing.
Posted: 2003-10-30 11:08am
by Xon
I use NTFS on all the computers I own (a win9x kernel isnt getting anywere near them!)
Posted: 2003-10-30 03:49pm
by Pu-239
Faram wrote:Psycho Smiley wrote:Ok, serious question for you WinXP experts:
I'm running XP Pro using FAT32 (it came that way) but am thinking about converting to NTFS. I've heard the official pros and cons from Microsoft, and none of the warnings apply to me. Are there any other ones that I need to know about? And will the benefits be noticeable?
Not really the bigest con IMHO is that you can't access the NTFS disk wo 3rd party stuff once it is ntfs.
Othervise follow the standard rules for any installation/modification.
Backup your stuff.
Actually, you can READ the stuff with a linux boot disk. You can't WRITE to it though (well, without risk of trashing disc). So, yeah, switch to NTFS all the way if you are not dual booting. There's a read-only driver for NTFS for win9x I believe, and there is read-write if you pay.
Posted: 2003-10-31 01:02am
by Crayz9000
Pu-239 wrote:Actually, you can READ the stuff with a linux boot disk. You can't WRITE to it though (well, without risk of trashing disc). So, yeah, switch to NTFS all the way if you are not dual booting. There's a read-only driver for NTFS for win9x I believe, and there is read-write if you pay.
I've used it. I believe the driver is called NTFS98 or something like that.
At any rate, the only way you can enable NTFS write support with Linux is to enable the write part of the alpha driver in the kernel, which is a fair bit of work. I decided to not run the risk of trashing my NTFS partition and simply have a few FAT32 partitions for temporary stuff.