Manjaro Dosya Sistemleri

Dosya Sistemleri

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Bu sayfada Manjaro'da yaygın olarak kullanılan bazı dosya sistemleri hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. Ayrıca nerede ve nasıl kullanıldığını da gösterir. Bunlar ve diğer dosya sistemleri hakkında daha fazla bilgiyi ARCH Wiki'de bulabilirsiniz.

Bir dosya sistemi, bir depolama ortamındaki (sabit disk, SSD ...) alanı yönetir. Dosyaların kaydedilip tekrar okunabilmesi için bu belleği işletim sisteminin kullanımına sunar. Aşağıdaki dosya sistemlerinin her birinin avantajları ve dezavantajları vardır. Çoğunlukla özel bir amaç için geliştirilirler ve dolayısıyla belirli bir ortamda kullanılırlar.

Linux

filesystems that are mostly used under Linux.

Note that many filesystem drivers are already included in the Linux kernel. You may not need anything else to mount, read, or write these filesystems. But there are packages with additional tools. You may need them to format, check, repair, modify, or optimize such filesystems. So if you regularly use a filesystem, it is a good idea to install the appropriate tools.

Ext2 → Ext3 → Ext4

Ext4 was previously the default file system in Manjaro. It is the successor to the most widely used Linux file systems (Ext3, Ext2) and promises improved design, higher performance, reliability, and more features compared to its predecessors.

If you are using Ext2 or Ext3, you can convert the partition to Ext4. Ext4 uses journaling, checksums and write barriers and is therefore more robust against damage.

Currently Ext4 is fully supported in Win10 and OsX. Support for ext4 has been built in since WSL is included in Win10 (2016).

Install

In Manjaro, e2fsprogs is already installed

A modern Copy on Write filesystem for Linux aimed at implementing advanced features while also focusing on fault tolerance, repair and easy administration. Btrfs not only is a filesystem, but also is partly a volume manager, software-raid, backup-tool, and it is flash-friendly.

Btrfs is now the default file system in Manjaro. Because Btrfs works differently, some things may seem unfamiliar and strange. The Btrfs page is therefore a good starting point for finding answers and gaining a better understanding of Btrfs.

Development of Btrfs started in 2007. Since that time, Btrfs is a part of the Linux kernel and is under active development. The Btrfs code base is stable . However, new features are still under development. Its main features and benefits are:

  • Snapshots which do not make a full copy of files
  • RAID - support for software-based RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 10
  • Self-healing - checksums for data and metadata, automatic detection of silent data corruptions
Maintenance
When using snapshots, you must be particularly careful not to use up all the space on the file system -> Btrfs#Out_of_space

Install

user $ pamac install btrfs-progs COPY TO CLIPBOARD

ReiserFS → reiser4

ReiserFS was the first journaling filesystem to be included in the standard kernel. It was actively used by some distros some time ago, but is not currently widely used. Reiser4 is the successor to ReiserFS(3). However, Reiser4 seems not to be integrated in the kernel yet.

As of kernel 6.13
reiserFS will no longer be supported.

Install

user $ pamac install reiserfsprogs reiser4progs COPY TO CLIPBOARD

Windows

filesystems mostly used in windows

NTFS

It is the most widely used filesystem on windows these days. It does exist in different versions, but unlike FAT32, all of them offer the following points:

  • Large files> 4GB
  • Long file names with UTF16 up to 255 characters
  • Rights management, ACL
  • Journaling of metadata
  • Compression, encryption, ...

Currently there are some restrictions when using NTFS with Linux. If windows is suddenly switched off or goes into hibernating, the NTFS filesystem is left in a "dirty-state". When Windows starts again, NTFS is the first to be cleaned. This operation is currently not supported by the Linux driver. Then Linux shows the NTFS filesystem as read-only to be on the safe side. The same thing may happen, when NTFS becomes damaged.

If you regularly switch between Windows and Linux
You should switch off "hibernation", "Hybrid Boot", "Fast Boot" in Windows. Then Linux has always full (read / write) access to NTFS drives.
If your NTFS file system becomes corrupted
It is strongly recommended that you only repair the file system using the original Windows tools. Anything else is highly risky.

Install

user $ pamac install ntfs-3g COPY TO CLIPBOARD

DOS

filesystems under DOS and early windows on a lot of floppydisks and USB-sticks

FAT16 → FAT32 (+VFAT)

This is a traditional filesystem under DOS and early Windows versions. Even today it can be found on many floppy disks, USB sticks and hard drives. It is supported by all types of operating systems and is therefore often used to exchange files, to pass them on, or to keep them accessible to both operating systems in the case of dualboot.

Even with FAT32, this comes not without its disadvantages.

  • no support for user rights or xattr
  • severely restricted file names (8.3 or LFN for VFAT, no distinction between lowercase and uppercase)
  • no files over 2GB (FAT16) 4GB (FAT32)
  • no journaling
  • not robust
Warning
FAT Filesystems do not use journaling. Data on such filesystems is vulnerable to irreparable corruption due to improper ejection or power outage.

Install

user $ pamac install dosfstools COPY TO CLIPBOARD

exFAT

Microsoft developed the exFAT (Extended File Allocation Table) in 2006 and optimized it for flash memories such as USB sticks and SD cards. It can store large files and large numbers of files, and it can manage very large partitions. It is supported by Linux, Windows, macOS and many other devices and is one of the most compatible filesystems. ExFAT is included in Linux 5.4 and higher.

  • Flash friendly
  • No support for user rights or xattr
  • Files over 4 GB
  • Checksums for metadata
  • No journal
  • Not robust
Warning
exFAT FS does not use journaling. Data on such a filesystem is vulnerable to irreparable corruption due to improper ejection or power outage.

Install

user $ pamac install exfatprogs COPY TO CLIPBOARD

macOS

Filesystems mostly used in macOS

HFS → HFS+

Install from AUR

user $ pamac install hfsprogs COPY TO CLIPBOARD

Others

XFS

ZFS

Comparisions

Possible usage of Filesystems
Filesystem Manjaro Win10 OSX Win9x, DOS
btrfs ● btrfs-progs ▷ ExtFS, WinBtrfs - -
ext2 ▷ ExtFS
ext3/4 ▷ ExtFS ?
reiser3 ● reiser4progs ▷ RFSTool ? -
NTFS ○ ntfs-3g
▶ 5.15?? ntfs3
?
FAT32 ● dosfstools
exFAT ▶ 5.4 exfatprogs ? ?
HFS ○ hfsprogs (AUR) ?
XFS ? ▷ ExtFS ?
ZFS ? ? ?
F2FS ? ? ?
JFS ? ? ?

● = fully supported, additional tools to install

▶ = included since kernel x.x.x 
○ = partially supported
▷ = possible via external tools
? = feel free to extend ;-)
Some important properties
Properties btrfs ext4 ext3 ext2 XFS ZFS F2FS JFS
journaling ● full ● ordered ● ordered -
barriers ? -
checksum ● full ◎ metadata - -
kompression ●,
zstd ▶ 4.14/5.1
- - -
encryption - ▶ 4.13 - -
snapshots - - -
TRIM possible ▶ 4.3 ▶ 2.6.33 - -
xattr, ACL ACL ACL ? ACL
small repair ● auto ● fsck ● fsck ● fsck
journal repair ● auto 3.2 ● fsck ● fsck ● fsck
repair after power loss ● auto, scrub ● tune2fs, fsck ? -
RAID 0, 1, 10 - - -
since 2009 2008 2001 1993

See also

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