Just a simple question : Which file system do you recommend for Linux? Ext4…?
EDIT : Thanks to everyone who commented, I think I will try btrfs on my root partition and keep ext4 for my home directory 😃
Just a simple question : Which file system do you recommend for Linux? Ext4…?
EDIT : Thanks to everyone who commented, I think I will try btrfs on my root partition and keep ext4 for my home directory 😃
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Yeah, but it isn’t noticeably “less stable” if at all anymore* unless you mean stable as in “essentially in maintenance mode”, and clearly good enough for SLES to make it the default. Stop spreading outdated FUD and make backups regularly if you care about your documents (ext4 won’t save you from disk failure either which is probably the more likely scenario).
* not talking about the RAID 5/6 modes, but those are explicitly marked unstable
My short BTRFS history
dd
barely managed to get all the data onto a 1TB SATA SSDdd
-ed the SATA SSD onto a 2TB NVMEStill works, never had a single failure
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I suppose by being more efficient, “using modern technology” (everything saving Google, Meta, Amazon etc. money and is thus extremely well funded, all server related stuff), is good for the environment.
If something runs faster on the same hardware, it may use less energy. It may also just be restricted in hardware usage, like not using multithreading.
Linux Distros shipping x86_64-v2 packages is a whole other problem…
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Like, all of them… or would you be a bit more specific?
Old CPUs are an okay use case, but targeting will literally remove all benefits in efficiency that were made in the last 14 or so years.
My Thinkpad T430 has v3, and it is a 3rd gen intel. People honestly running hardware older than that are rare.
For sure the hardware should be supported, but it is not the target audience and pulls the others down.
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No, and this is for sure an issue. Having different repos would increase fragmentation a lot.