On Fri, 21 Jun 2002 03:19:23 -0400
Rick Thomas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said with temporary authority

> It's something you used to have to do on Windows disks. 
> "De-Fragment".
> 
> When you write a lot of small files, then delete some of them, the
> "allocation bitmap" for the disk gets to look like a swiss cheese --
> lots of little holes.  The little holes get used for the next file(s)
> you write, and those files become "fragmented".  The net effect is
> that reading and writing files from a fragmented disk takes longer
> than from an un-fragmented disk, where the files are mostly
> contiguous.  Sometimes a _lot_ longer for a really badly fragged disk.
>  People used to sell utilities for de-frag'ing windows disks, for lots
>  of money.
> 
> Nowadays, it's cheaper not to bother... when a disk becomes fragged,
> you just throw it away and get a newer, bigger, cheaper, one... (;->)
> 
> 
> Rick

correct me if I'm wrong... (it happens a lot that I am, trust me.... I'm
married, I know ) but the difference between vfat and ext2 is the way
they write back a file.  With vfat, say with a 4 gig partition and 2
gigs of data, it attempts to write the file back to the same space that
it came from.  If the file won't fit it then points to the remaining
part written in the first available free space that will hold it.  As
single file could have 4, 5 or more fragments as it grows larger and
larger.  (it will maintain the existing fragments and create new ones as
needed.)  ext2 as I understand it looks at the original spot, determines
if it will fit, and if not writes the changed file to a new location
that has enough continuous space to hold the entire file.  This
minimizes fragmentation but does tend to have data " all over the
place."  Aesthetically unpleasing but once a file is found in the map
yields a faster read, and less fragments that despite theories to the
contrary,  do get lost.  Now if you have 1.8 gigs of data on a 2 gig
drive the ability to find free space is severely reduced.  Maybe this is
the problem in Alaska.  The drive is too full.  I don't know, but it is
interesting how it happened and worth looking into for sure. 

James

> 
> > 
> >> um...whats "defrag"?
> >> 
> >> Mark
> > 
> > .. ya know.. it's for taking off the frag.
> > 
> > Damian
> 
> 
> 

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