>>>>> "Matthias" == Matthias Hentges <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Matthias> Ext3 is rock-stable since it is based on ext2 which is in use Matthias> for many years and is well tested. You probably cannot infer the stability of ext3 from that of ext2. The layout has been made mostly compatible, but the code has been changed for much more than what you can trust without trying it. Matthias> Many people have reported problems (including data-loss) with Matthias> ReiserFS, but for most people ReiserFS works great. I think that is experience during the time when Reiserfs is still stabilizing. I don't know anyone still unhappy with Reiserfs with its stability. The real problem of Reiserfs is that it is not compatible with ext2 at all, and your only hope to create a Reiser filesystem is to create it from scratch. This trouble has to be weighed against the performance benefit that is brought by the transition, which is basically none unless you have a directory containing thousands of files (then Reiser will be much better for looking up files in that directory). That is for Reiser3. Reiser4 is about to come out, and with luck it will get into Linux kernel 2.6/3.0. They say performance doubles with this FS (they achieve this by delayed allocation of blocks to minimize fragmentation), and perhaps that will be a better time to switch FS. Regards, Isaac. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]