Carlos E. R. wrote:
The Thursday 2007-06-07 at 10:12 +0200, Morten Bjørnsvik wrote:
Maybe that was a fact years ago with immature releases pre 2.4.19 versions. That is _NOT_ true now. XFS is probably the most stressed filesystem on the planet. Most Hollywood studio backbones and linux workstations runs xfs. It's only drawback is delete which is slow by design, because it has to traverse the inodes to figure out which blocks to delete and not a direct hashed pointer-table.
Slow? It is the faster deleting large files, almost instantaneous. So much so that it is recomended for use with mythtv for that very reason.
I've used the xfs_repair, xfsdump, xfsrestore and xfs_db tools extensively. I've had lots of bad blocks, zeroed inodes and other disk failures. I've almost everytime managed to restore most of the data on the disk.
I have an unrepairable xfs partition that crashes xfs_repair every time, with a bug report.
FWIW, I recently tried installing Ubuntu and thought I'd try XFS for a change. I got a warning message that GRUB has problems with XFS, so I went with JFS on the boot partition instead and XFS on /home. -- Use OpenOffice.org http://www.openoffice.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org