You are not logged in.

#1 2013-01-10 13:41:02

kerasi
Member
Registered: 2011-07-07
Posts: 39

SSD questions

hello

and a happy new year

i have a SSD Micron M4 256GB installed into my ThinkPad T420 and would know what filesystem you choose
what files have to be modified and what have to be written into the files?

Offline

#2 2013-01-10 13:44:34

Trilby
Inspector Parrot
Registered: 2011-11-29
Posts: 29,447
Website

Re: SSD questions

There is a wiki on the different filesystems.  Threads asking questions like that are quickly TGN'ed.  But is the following a separate question?

kerasi wrote:

what files have to be modified and what have to be written into the files?

To do what?


"UNIX is simple and coherent..." - Dennis Ritchie, "GNU's Not UNIX" -  Richard Stallman

Offline

#3 2013-01-10 13:46:20

ronmon
Member
Registered: 2011-04-15
Posts: 48

Re: SSD questions

The Wiki article is a good place to start.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/SSD

I used btrfs for / and /home and have had no problems despite its official beta status. Don't forget to use the noatime (or relatime) and discard options in fstab.

Offline

#4 2013-01-10 14:43:18

graysky
Wiki Maintainer
From: :wq
Registered: 2008-12-01
Posts: 10,595
Website

Re: SSD questions

I like btrfs for load leveling but I do not like the status of the fsck util and file recovery options.  Stick to ext4 for now is my advice.  Also read the wiki page already referenced, then, re-read it tongue


CPU-optimized Linux-ck packages @ Repo-ck  • AUR packagesZsh and other configs

Offline

#5 2013-01-10 19:38:19

teateawhy
Member
From: GER
Registered: 2012-03-05
Posts: 1,138
Website

Re: SSD questions

kerasi wrote:

hello

and a happy new year

i have a SSD Micron M4 256GB installed into my ThinkPad T420 and would know what filesystem you choose
what files have to be modified and what have to be written into the files?

I think you have to read more to understand the basics.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/File_Systems
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Partitioning

Last edited by teateawhy (2013-01-10 19:38:58)

Offline

#6 2013-01-11 19:15:56

felixculpa
Member
From: Alberta, Canada
Registered: 2012-06-12
Posts: 252

Re: SSD questions

I would stick with ext4 and partition the drive for security as outlined here. Btrfs has some interesting sounding features but from what I've heard the potential for crashes and other problems is higher than a plain ext4 file system. For my fstab I have at a minimum, defaults,discard set for the options for each partition.

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB