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#26 2010-02-17 04:48:31

deaduserlol
Member
Registered: 2010-02-08
Posts: 7

Re: ext4 reflections

I tired ext4 about a year ago. It was doing fine till I got a power outage and it fried my filesystem.
Now am using xfs.


Govern a great nation as you would cook a small fish. -Lao Tzu

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#27 2010-02-18 10:32:01

jack.mitchell
Member
From: Ely, Cambridgeshire, UK
Registered: 2008-08-28
Posts: 156
Website

Re: ext4 reflections

I've been using it for about a year now, I had one problem in the early days where it seemed one of my partitions got corrupted but I managed to recover all my data. The main advantage I found is that system booting flies compared to when I had ext3, or even xfs.

Jack.

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#28 2010-02-18 12:36:18

3])
Member
From: Netherlands
Registered: 2009-10-12
Posts: 215

Re: ext4 reflections

EXT4 always caused me to have some corrupt files in /etc/ to the point where my /etc/rc.conf was blank. This meant I had to put in a rescue knoppix disc, edit the file and paste the text that I found on the net. Just before anyone screams virus, it wasn't, and the problem is highlighted at the sites:
1.http://ubuntuforums.org/archive/index.php/t-1040199.html
2.http://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=74362

I use ext3 now and everything has been doing great so far.


“There are two ways of constructing a software design. One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies. And the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies.”-- C.A.R. Hoare

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#29 2010-02-18 18:06:06

Borosai
Member
From: Sandy Appendix, U.S.A.
Registered: 2006-06-15
Posts: 227

Re: ext4 reflections

I'm using ext4 on an old laptop and I regularly have disk check errors during boot (which require a manual check before rebooting). At first I thought it was due to failed suspend to RAM attempts or turning off the system improperly, but it happens under regular use. I don't know enough to conclude if it's the filesystem or a bad hard drive, but it definitely doesn't inspire confidence.

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#30 2010-02-18 20:12:20

falconindy
Developer
From: New York, USA
Registered: 2009-10-22
Posts: 4,111
Website

Re: ext4 reflections

Combination of btrfs and Ext4 here. No direct issues with either FS, but since 2.6.32, I've been unable to mount AUFS on either FS with write barriers enabled.

Last edited by falconindy (2010-02-18 20:12:48)

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#31 2010-02-18 20:56:37

jtang
Member
Registered: 2010-02-18
Posts: 1

Re: ext4 reflections

i've only barely used ext4 but i will probably be using it more for the larger filesystems that i run. the old ext3 limit (if i remember right was a bit of a pain) being able to create 30tb+ sized systems would be nice. so far i use xfs for filesystems bigger than 4tb.

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#32 2010-02-18 23:42:16

milomouse
Member
Registered: 2009-03-24
Posts: 940
Website

Re: ext4 reflections

I used to use ext4 but migrated to reiserfs3 when I was noticing faster delete-times and read-writes (just from observation) on my reiserfs partition. After a while all my partitions became reiserfs and I never looked back. Nothing really wrong with ext4, it would probably be my second choice, but even the fsck's are faster on my laptop and I have some pretty big video files on here. Just my experience/opinion, blah blah. tongue

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#33 2010-02-19 01:25:32

Snakeye
Member
From: Surrey BC
Registered: 2009-12-19
Posts: 91

Re: ext4 reflections

I've been using Ext4 for a while now too. I've noticed no change from Ext3.

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#34 2010-02-23 03:00:40

theapodan
Member
From: Virginia, USA
Registered: 2008-10-21
Posts: 116

Re: ext4 reflections

I moved / and /var to ext4 from jfs.  /home is still jfs

There is no difference in speed that I can perceive, but a stopwatch says otherwise.  ext4 is very slightly faster (with writeback and nobarrier).  If I knew what performance improvements I would get before doing it, I wouldn't have bothered. 

As an aside, fsck'ing after an unclean shutdown is faster in jfs than in ext4.

I've never experienced any data loss in either jfs or ext4, although I can't say the same for reiserfs or fat32.

If I was reinstalling I'd use jfs again, just because it's reputation for soundness is much more established than ext4's.

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#35 2010-02-27 23:49:18

nloudon1
Member
Registered: 2010-02-15
Posts: 21

Re: ext4 reflections

I use ext4 on all of my linux partitions (with the exception of my home directory partition), and I've had no problems with it whatsoever. It's totally stable and is even a bit faster than ext3.

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#36 2010-02-28 01:30:02

Misfit138
Misfit Emeritus
From: USA
Registered: 2006-11-27
Posts: 4,189

Re: ext4 reflections

theapodan wrote:

I moved / and /var to ext4 from jfs.  /home is still jfs

There is no difference in speed that I can perceive, but a stopwatch says otherwise.  ext4 is very slightly faster (with writeback and nobarrier).  If I knew what performance improvements I would get before doing it, I wouldn't have bothered. 

As an aside, fsck'ing after an unclean shutdown is faster in jfs than in ext4.

I've never experienced any data loss in either jfs or ext4, although I can't say the same for reiserfs or fat32.

If I was reinstalling I'd use jfs again, just because it's reputation for soundness is much more established than ext4's.

Agreed.
I prefer and mostly use JFS. It's never let me down.
A nice ReiserFS /var really makes pacman zip, though. wink

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#37 2010-06-03 19:39:41

ssri
Member
Registered: 2010-02-16
Posts: 216

Re: ext4 reflections

ext4 + using mysql with amarok1.4 makes me want to cry, particularly when editing a large number of files, say 1,000 tracks.  In this specific case, ext3 flew through them.  I guess I could disable barriers in ext4, but that would risk data corruption :-\

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#38 2010-06-04 01:59:10

Ranguvar
Member
Registered: 2008-08-12
Posts: 2,563

Re: ext4 reflections

I've never had a single problem with ext4 (probably because during the whole file corruption debacle I switched to nodelalloc), and I use it for all my partitions.
It's well supported, resizes in any way you might care for, in general a solid filesystem -- and when it comes to filesystems, solid is desirable.
I'm not really feeling a need for speed lately (I run with barrier=1), but ext4 is no slouch, either.
In general satisfied, except I'd love on-the-fly compression a la Reiser4.  That can save a ton of space in some circumstances, and even _improve_ speed in a lot of cases.

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#39 2010-06-05 07:19:38

kokoko3k
Member
Registered: 2008-11-14
Posts: 2,426

Re: ext4 reflections

isn't barrier=1 the default mount option?
Btw, i explicitely mount all with barrier=0 to gain speed.
Maybe i'm lucky, but i never had a problem with corruption/blank files (i use it on 2 desktops and 1 laptop), even after hard reboot
I just make sure to issue "sync" after editing critical files.


Help me to improve ssh-rdp !
Retroarch User? Try my koko-aio shader !

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#40 2010-06-05 07:53:39

archman-cro
Member
From: Croatia
Registered: 2010-04-04
Posts: 943
Website

Re: ext4 reflections

Been using ext4 on both partitions I have since I started with Arch Linux on April 1st. No problems so far, and everything works nicely. smile

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#41 2010-06-05 08:09:17

dyscoria
Member
Registered: 2008-01-10
Posts: 1,007

Re: ext4 reflections

ext4 gave me a one second improvement in bootspeed compared to ext3..... now that's what i call speed.


flack 2.0.6: menu-driven BASH script to easily tag FLAC files (AUR)
knock-once 1.2: BASH script to easily create/send one-time sequences for knockd (forum/AUR)

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