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Instead of searching for the impossible, a file system that whatever happens magically gets all pieces together, try to establish good backup routines.
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Hmm, I've never had any problems with JFS at all, not even after sudden power loss, whereas I've had many problems with others (ext4 and btrfs come to mind as having caused a lot of hassles)
Same here for about the last 5 years, minus the problems with ext4 and btrfs. The only time I've had a file system problem not due to hardware malfunction was with reiserfs.
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Yup, file systems can fail. And hard drives fail often. Backup, backup, backup. With simple tools like rsync there really is no excuse.
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itsbrad212 wrote:Oh, I was contemplating switching to JFS from ext4, but after hearing [this FUD], I have second thoughts. ext4 has never given me any data loss problems, so I'll stick with that.
Don't believe the FUD.
Thanks for the consumer confidence
itsbrad212 wrote:but after hearing these fun stories
Try searching the forums and you will read very similar stories about ext4.
I wasn't saying ext4 doesn't fail, I was saying it has never given me any problems, and I've been using ext* since close to the beginning.
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Well, I like exotic filesystems. JFS is the most recent one I tried and I have to say that I'm not gonna try it for next 2 years probably. Each time I get a dirty shutdown (aka I-forgot-it's-in-sleep-mode) it spits out the "mounted as read only". Not that I care much, that's mostly a testing system. But for anything mission-critical I wouldn't pick JFS, Too risky.
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