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I like XFS myself. Reiser v3 worked fine for quite a while, and ext3 works well too. I haven't tried JFS, and honestly, probably won't.
These days, I am not interested in nosebleed fast blow off your underpants speed. I would rather have something that I can have reasonable confidence in regarding data integrity, and fault tolerance (graceful failures). Fast is definately nice, considering those caveats.
"Be conservative in what you send; be liberal in what you accept." -- Postel's Law
"tacos" -- Cactus' Law
"t̥͍͎̪̪͗a̴̻̩͈͚ͨc̠o̩̙͈ͫͅs͙͎̙͊ ͔͇̫̜t͎̳̀a̜̞̗ͩc̗͍͚o̲̯̿s̖̣̤̙͌ ̖̜̈ț̰̫͓ạ̪͖̳c̲͎͕̰̯̃̈o͉ͅs̪ͪ ̜̻̖̜͕" -- -̖͚̫̙̓-̺̠͇ͤ̃ ̜̪̜ͯZ͔̗̭̞ͪA̝͈̙͖̩L͉̠̺͓G̙̞̦͖O̳̗͍
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Hey, I'm not interested in blinding speed either... I just don't like to wait five minutes for pacman to find one lousy package in its database.
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That's funny, I'm using whatever came with a pentium II 350 and pacman returns results in under a minute. vanilla ext3, 64 megs of ram.
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ext3 (plain) for home... it's stable and proven.
ext3 for /boot
jfs for /
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I use ext3 and it's very good i think;]
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ext3 for /home
reiserfs for Ubuntu
XFS for Arch
I tried ext2/3,reiserfs,xfs,jfs and I think that overall the best is and remains ext3. XFS is strangely very slow with pacman but for the rest is pretty fast.
To get something done, a committee should consist of no more than three persons, two of them absent.
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My Github
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ext2 /boot
ext3 /home
ext3 /
I used to tailor partitions and use of partitions but the above is where I settled in. Less thought required and I haven't noticed any performance hit to speak of.
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I tried ext2, etxt3, reiser, xfs, jfs.
ext2 was slow, ext3 surprisingly too. reiser broke itself several times, and exhausted the cpu. xfs was very slow in writing a larger number of small files, but was very fast in handling larger files. jfs hat some bugs in former versions, but was allways fast and stable for me.
Since some years I run
jfs /boot
jfs /
jfs /home
jfs /home/shared
Frumpus ♥ addict
[mu'.krum.pus], [frum.pus]
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The only filesystems I've used are ext2, ext3 and reiser 3.6, the latter being the one I'm currently using for the most important partitions.
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recently converted ext3 user here. used reiser3 before.
now I use ext3 with all the lovely tweaks
IBM T41p - 2373-xXx - kernel26thinkpad
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ext3
easyer to fix if somthing goes 'frequently' wrong .
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ext3
easyer to fix if somthing goes 'frequently' wrong .
also ext3 has some nice tweaks that can really ramp up the performance.
Also ext2/3 can be read/written to in windows.
IBM T41p - 2373-xXx - kernel26thinkpad
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Also ext2/3 can be read/written to in windows.
I've heard about this but never tried it. As of what version of windows?
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djpharoah wrote:Also ext2/3 can be read/written to in windows.
I've heard about this but never tried it. As of what version of windows?
None.
It's not done natively, and the existing opensource proprietary R/W driver treats ext3 as ext2 (no metadata being stored).
It's functionality is just about as good as the new-generation ntfs driver for Linux: it's working, it's fast, but does have limitations.
Microshaft delenda est
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djpharoah wrote:Also ext2/3 can be read/written to in windows.
I've heard about this but never tried it. As of what version of windows?
I use explore2fs and use windows xp. I also use it on my server which has windows 2k.
It has saved my bacon in the past and is awesome for accessing files across the OSes.
IBM T41p - 2373-xXx - kernel26thinkpad
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how about ZFS ? has anyone tried this one already ?
what goes up must come down
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As of right now Linux doesn't support it at all. I'm betting development of Linux drivers and utils will start in a year or so though...
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