Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2004 12:27:35 +1100 From: Ron Joordens <ron.joordens@indec.com.au> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Best filesysyem for FreeBSD & Linux shared partition Message-ID: <11F383396235D511994B00A0C9E1753772122D@INDEC-NTSERVER>
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Hello Everyone, I am multibooting FreeBSD with a few Linux distributions such as Mandrake, Gentoo, Slackware, Red Hat. (I'll reduce that list to a couple of favourites eventually). I have set up a primary partition with ext2 filesystem to act as a single data partition accessable from all OSs. That seemed to be fine until recently when I ran out of room on my FreeBSD /usr directory and moved my /usr/ports/distfiles directory to the shared ext2fs partition. At first there seemed to be no problems but when I tried to upgrade KDE and XFree86 using portupgrade the error messages began. XFree86 always encountered errors when checking the checksums of the source tarballs. It would say at first that the checksums were ok but then immediately after crash sying that there were crc errors. KDE was more serious. It would almost immediately crash with a Fatal Trap 12 error and reboot. After finding nothing on the on the forums I finally moved the distfiles to a new drive which I formatted with the FreeBSD ufs filesystem. VOILA!! No more problems. So it seems that FreeBSD support for ext2fs is at fault. So what is the best filesystem to use for a shared partition? For example, does FreeBSD provide better support for ext3fs or resierfs? Or does Linux provide better support for ufs? Any thoughts? Thanks in advance, Ron
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