Hi! I beg to differ.
If high performance appeals to you, give ReiserFS OR XFS a try - since all benchmarks on this subjects show a more or less significant difference dealing with a large number of big vs. small files. I also don't quite understand the suggestion to ignore "arguments about data corruption". These weren't arguments but simple facts. A lot of posters here experienced various troubles with almost every FS there is. That doesn't proof that any of the discussed filesystems is BAD - but it does proof that - excuse my english - shit happens and you might lose data regardless of the FS you went for. A 100% bulletproof FS simply seem not to exist. When I had to decide the FS issue myself my questions hovered over things like - performance / benchmarks - journaling quality - recovery tools - compatibility (parted issues, non-linux OS drivers and so forth) - FS overhead - etc. etc. Regards spox Am Dienstag, den 19.04.2005, 08:16 +0200 schrieb Richard Fish: > Jarry wrote: > > > I'm counting votes, and waiting for some final decision to come. > > I can not contribute to this discussion, because I have absolutely > > no experience with journaling filesystems at all. That's why I > > asked... > > > > Up to now I'm more confused than before posting my question. > > Anyway thanks to all who replied. > > > > I would summarize it this way: > > If high performance appeals to you, give reiserfs a try. > > If full data journaling (instead of just meta-data) appeals to you, go > with ext3, but read up on the tuning options available. I should note > that for some very specific workloads, full data journaling with ext3 > will be faster than reiserfs. > > I would ignore the arguments about "x filesystem corrupted my data, and > y never has". Personally, I had filesystem corruption with reiserfs > back in '99 or so. It interacted badly with the VM in a few of the 2.4 > kernel series. In another case, I had faulty hardware. But data > corruption is not widespread for any of (xfs, reiserfs, ext3, jfs) with > current and properly configured kernels and working (especially not > overclocked) hardware. > > Pick one and use it. > > -Richard > -- Mit freundlichen Grüßen Heinz Sporn SPORN it-freelancing Mobile: ++43 (0)699 / 127 827 07 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Snail: Steyrer Str. 20 A-4540 Bad Hall Austria / Europe -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list