What's Happening With NTFS On Linux?
A suspiciously shady Anonymous Coward asks: "Given that more and more people with MS operating systems are migrating to Linux, it seems curious that the NTFS kernel module has seen little development (still experimental, dangerous in RW mode). What projects are on the horizon to make Linux play nicer with NTFS volumes?" Will the changes that Microsoft has made to NTFS for Windows 2000 significantly delay any planned NTFS development?
Uh, no, not at all. First of all NTFS is anything but ideal for removable media, period. Have you ever seen NTFS on a floppy? There's a damn good reason NT doesn't let you format a floppy with NTFS. The I/O overhead needed for NTFS kills perfomance dead, nevermind the space you lose to filesystem overhead. NTFS is OK on fast things, like hard drives, but don't even think about using it on anything slower.
If anything, FAT is ideal for small removable media - floppies, that is. For ZIP disks, you might think about ext2fs, if you're not going to use it under any other OS. FAT's simple structure keeps overhead low, which is good for removable drives, which are slower.
-Matthead
-Matthead
I don't really have much to say about this topic, except that I once heard that NTFS was the ideal filesystem under Linux for removable media, because it was resistant to the manglings that plague FAT and ext2fs. Is that true?
I am not a lawyer.
http://slashdot.org/articles /00 /09/25/2314215.shtml
I am not a lawyer.
If all you need is read support to "be at peace" you can do that now, you just need to enable NTFS support in your kernel. I don't think the stock RH7 kernel has NTFS support, if not you'll have to recompile. I can read my Win2k NTFS partition fine.
chris@xanadu:~$ whatis /.
/.: nothing appropriate.
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