As I understand it, there are a few new file systems somewhat
available on Linux -- ZFS, XFS, and Btrfs.
But soe are still under development, ZFS is pparently under a
prolematic license, and I don't know about XFS.
I've onece heard about one of the new systems that one shouldn't
bother using it unless one has at least 8 gigabytes of RAM.
Now, just how mature are these, how easily managed, how reliable.
I'll be populating a new device with a (I hope) high-reliablity file
system soon. It doesn't have a lot of RAM, but the RAM does have
parity checking.
Long-term data preservation is more important than speed.
Currently on another system I'm using ext4 over LLVM over software
RAID-1. I know RAID isn't a reliable backup system; I make separate
off-line backups.
What should I be considering for the new system? The same? Are the
new systems stale and well enough established in the Linux ecosystem
to be candidates?
-- hendrik
On Fri, Dec 22, 2017 at 04:13:34PM +0100, Jaromil wrote:
> On Fri, 22 Dec 2017, Chris Dos wrote:
>
> > Know nothing about zfs? Well, don't start learning it as you will probably
> > not want to use anything else.
>
> I confirm this :^) real pity for the licensing... but yea, btrfs still
> can't cover all functionalities of ZFS, just some. I run a ZRAID since
> years and wow.
>
> cheers
>
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