Sam Clemens wrote:
XFS is a very reliable, journalled filesystem designed for high performance by SGI.
Ext3 is not the same thing as Ext2. As Oddball noted, Ext2 is most appropriate for /boot.
Ext3 is now the "standard" filesystem for Linux. It consists of the previous standard filesystem, Ext2, with journalling added to improve both reliability and performance.
Well, ext3 may be the default fs du jour, but e.g on suse linux enterprise, the default is still reiser - and in my testing, when we were trying to decide on a standard filesystem choice for our new server builds, reiserfs beat jfs, xfs, and ext3 handily. In future, ext4, btfs and ocfs2 are all contenders for the "default fs" title. Unfortunately, Hans Reiser is embroiled in some legal difficulties which have clouded the outlook for reiser4. Joe -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org