On Wed, 2007-04-25 at 19:13 +0200, Joe Hart wrote: > Greg Folkert wrote: > [snip] > > How about posting it here? > > > > --------------------------------------------- > > > > # /etc/fstab: static file system information. > > # > > #<file system> <mount point> <type> <options> <dump> <pass> > > proc /proc proc defaults 0 0 > > > > # /dev/hda3 > > UUID=456600fd-b794-4931-8703-bded8a1902bc / xfs defaults 0 1 > > Wow, you run XFS on your root file system! I wouldn't dare do something > like that. I learned that XFS is good for large files, but most of what > sits on / are small files. I also learned that it was a bit unstable if > power is suddenly lost.
Disclaimer: Filesystem format wars are over. Use what you want, I could not care less about it. What follows is personal experience. Deal with it. Thanks. Greg. No more unstable than EXT3 or JFS, MUCH better than ReiserFS (v3.5 or 3.6, won't try v4.0). I've found XFS to be a much better FS than any I've really tried for a long time. I've been using it (personally == not work critical) for years... hmmm 2.4.12-xfs (could be .13 or .14) I believe. I've had zero barfings with XFS since then. Anytime it (XFS) is interrupted and shutdown uncleanly it has been fine and recovered very well... including when writing. The Big file vs Small file thing... I regularly have 100K+ <1K files in single directories and XFS holds up just fine. Of course it also holds up well with 200 4GB+ files. In fact, while writing this e-mail, we had a power outage. A squirrel got popped in-between a couple of over-head wires, knocking the main fuses at the end of the street. Evolution auto-saved this e-mail just before it and all XFS file systems I have at home came up no problem. > That of course is not an issue when one has a good UPS. Never used one on my workstations. Now my machine downstairs auto-shuts when power left is less than 5 minutes. > I was going to post my /etc/fstab which uses UUID, but since you already > did, there is no point. Sure there is a point, the more examples in the list, the better the chances someone will find them. -- greg, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Novell's Directory Services is a competitive product to Microsoft's Active Directory in much the same way that the Saturn V is a competitive product to those dinky little model rockets that kids light off down at the playfield. -- Thane Walkup
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