Aryeh M. Friedman wrote:
I am creating a triple boot machine (FB, Linux, Vista) and want to keep
all non-system files (i.e. any thing I made vs. was installed by the OS
[including 3rd party software]) avaible (r/w) by all three OS's. I
know I can do this by putting /usr/home on a NTFS partition but am
worried about the slowness of ntfs-3g/ntfsprogs (90% of the time I am in
FreeBSD and have several things going that need decent disk performence
[bit torrents]). Any ideas?
BTW an added plus would be some way to automatically have one or all the
OS's maintain archival copies for backup purposes
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For my dual-booting laptop ( FreeBSD , WinXP ) I'm using ext2 for my
data partiton. Works like a charm for me ( Using
http://www.fs-driver.org/ for WinXP and sysutils/e2fsprogs ) Only thing
that can be anoying is when FreeBSD crashes and I have to fsck my entire
data partiton which can take a while. But possibly this can be avoided
by using ext3 instead of ext2 (But the utilities are the same ).
Good luck,
--
-Frank Staals
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