Carlos Rodrigues wrote: > And after 8 years using Linux all the time, I came to find the MS-land > rituals somewhat exotic (if unix filesystems take care of themselves, > why can't the so called New Technology File System?).
It can. NTFS is a dirivative of OS/2's HPFS. HPFS didn't have a defrag worth mention either for much the same reasons as have been discussed here. In fact in all my time running NTFS I've hardly ever thought to defrag. When I have it was because of people coming from FAT habits trying to solve unlreated problems (latest was City of Heroes server lagginess, go fig) and I would defrag just to prove them wrong (No, really, disk "fragmentation" means nothing to server-side lag, see!?). In each case the defragmentation took forever and resulted in absolutely no perceptable improvement of performance. > Most people don't actually know the specifics on why this is so, but > know that their many-years-old filesystems don't turn slow just from > using them. Point in support of this statement. I've had hard drives physically fail before my ext2/ext3 file systems have failed. While I am not pushing them as hard as they would be pushed in a production environment they aren't lax, either. ;) -- Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | main connection to the switchboard of souls. -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature