• jfs filesystem problem?

    From PATRICK SIGLIN@454:3/105 to BARRY MARTIN on Monday, October 04, 2010 23:03:00
    Re: jfs filesystem problem?
    By: Barry Martin to Russell Tiedt on Wed Jun 30 2010 07:50 am


    Hi Russell!

    xfs ... , not tried that ... , mostly I have used ext2 or ext3
    ... , will keep the older system, hassle in mind ...
    The older installation guidelines indicated using jfs or xfs for large
    hard drives (doesn't give a size).
    Must look into that sometime ...

    In your free time. <gg>

    These sites may be of interest:

    http://xfs.org/index.php/XFS_FAQ

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XFs

    (extracted from above)

    XFS is a high-performance journaling file system created by Silicon
    Graphics, originally for their IRIX operating system and later ported to
    the Linux kernel. XFS is particularly proficient at handling large files
    and at offering smooth data transfers.


    Capacity

    XFS is a 64-bit file system. It supports a maximum file system size of 8
    binary exabytes minus one byte, though this is subject to block limits
    imposed by the host operating system. On 32-bit Linux systems, this
    limits the file and file system sizes to 16 binary terabytes.


    Didn't see anything about how small the hard drive/partition could be (minimum capacity; bytes), so I'm guessing xfs is just another method of formatting as far as that topic is concerned. It seems to be able to
    handle large files better than other formats.

    ¯ ®
    ¯ Barry_Martin_3@ ®
    ¯ @MSN.COM ®
    ¯ ®


    ... Belong: To take your time
    This thing still working?

    * Patrick Siglin - www.memphistw.org *






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