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Author Topic: Reducing fragmentation  (Read 8033 times)

Kry

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Re: Reducing fragmentation
« Reply #15 on: June 04, 2005, 09:28:31 PM »

I have been using XFS for a long time with some stability issues. No problems whatsoever :P
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Mr Faber

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Re: Reducing fragmentation
« Reply #16 on: June 04, 2005, 10:01:10 PM »

The problem on XFS is that you can't see the problems. After restart everything seems to be Ok. Until I have started aMule which has had the standard configuration.
Another one all part.met files or at least nearly alle part.met were defective.
Through aMule I have realized that something was wrong but what is with files I don't use/check often e.g. logs or whatever. Amule works fine too but my old config was away.

cu
Mr Faber
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deltaHF

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Re: Reducing fragmentation
« Reply #17 on: June 04, 2005, 10:05:04 PM »

after a crash with reiserfs last year i had enough of it (the whole partition is gone).. now i'm using XFS and i'm really happy with it.

cheers

Kry

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Re: Reducing fragmentation
« Reply #18 on: June 04, 2005, 10:08:20 PM »

reiserfs was the only thing that made me lose data (all xmule/lmule info back in 2003) and 60Gb on the partition.

No more resiser for me ;)
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Mr Faber

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Re: Reducing fragmentation
« Reply #19 on: June 04, 2005, 11:55:36 PM »

I still useing and I am going to use XFS in future but not for the home and root partiton. It is good for big files and partitions on which data aren't saved often and automatically IMHO except you have a USV and a Kernel which doesn't crash.
I still have reiserfs on my root partition but I wanted to change to ext3. I haven't any bad experience with reiserfs (it seems to have no problems with my crashes) but ext3 is more secure and this little speed difference doesn't matter.

cu
Mr Faber
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