hi ya > David Brodbeck wrote: > > On Nov 30, 2007, at 9:45 AM, Stefan Monnier wrote: > > No. The NTFS file system does not need defragmentation.
all file systems can use a defragmentor lets assume a disk format of: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ...... 63 ( aka sectors ) if you try to read/write a file starting sector 1 into your disk buffer, you may or may not have disk buffer space left to read another 512Byte from sector 2... if you wait a bit, few milliseconds for the system to services its disk interrupts, you now have disk buffer space to read sector 2 .. but since you waited too long, sector 2 came and went, so now you have to wait for a whole revolution before you can read sector 2 ---- if you format using, than you may or may not have time to read sector 2 1 11 21 31 41 51 61 2 12 22 32 42 52 62 3 13 23 33 43 53 63 4 14... the defragmentor can be used to move sectors around to optimize reading the whole file w/o waiting for the next revolution - how the defragmentor displays used and unused sectors can make a big difference in the pretty pic you see vs the actual performance what you see the defragmentor showing would be a continuously allocated file instead of scattered across various sectors within a track or having to move the heads to a different tract to get to the next 512byte there's only 512bytes per sector 63 sectors per track and any number of cylinders depending on your disk size the number of heads and disk buffer size would depend on your disk drive manufacturer and model# one traack is 512MB * 62 == 31.744KBytes with 16 physical heads .... you can read 509.904KBytes per revolution all un-used disk sectors belonging to a different file is read and discarded ... what a waste with 8MB or 16MB disk buffer .. you can read lots of tracks before the disk buffer is full ... there should NOT be a "slow" system lba ... maps all the cylinder/heads/sector into other whacky numbers ( lba blocks ) c ya alvin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]