I can't wait to get a new box!!! Soon enough I hope! Linux does not require defragmenting.

Archived topic from Iceteks, old topic ID:334, old post ID:1645
No. If on Linux and running the ext3 file system, the journaling and rewriting processes should keep everything contiguous and organized on the hard drive. Not even a single file is fragmented.rovingcowboy wrote: they all require defragmenting.
that is called on the fly defragmenting. it is doing the same job only while it is in use.Magic wrote:
the journaling and rewriting processes should keep everything contiguous and organized on the hard drive.
exactly. so the user doesn't have to go through the pain of doing it him or herself.rovingcowboy wrote:that is called on the fly defragmenting. it is doing the same job only while it is in use.Magic wrote:
the journaling and rewriting processes should keep everything contiguous and organized on the hard drive.![]()
Yep no pain and no downtime! But does that make it slower though? That's what I wonder.Magic wrote:exactly. so the user doesn't have to go through the pain of doing it him or herself.rovingcowboy wrote:that is called on the fly defragmenting. it is doing the same job only while it is in use.Magic wrote:
the journaling and rewriting processes should keep everything contiguous and organized on the hard drive.![]()
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Only during the writing processing. You may notice that you're just sitting there, minding your own business, just surfing the web maybe and all of a sudden you notice a lot of disk activity. This happens about a few times a day, and during that time of course, the machine is only a little slower. But it's usually pretty quick and benficial. No worries if you have a bad shutdown either, it's very unlikely for there to be anything wrong with the file system because of its journaling techniques.Red Squirrel wrote:Yep no pain and no downtime! But does that make it slower though? That's what I wonder.Magic wrote:exactly. so the user doesn't have to go through the pain of doing it him or herself.rovingcowboy wrote:
that is called on the fly defragmenting. it is doing the same job only while it is in use.![]()
![]()
Linux really sounds like fun...Magic wrote:Only during the writing processing. You may notice that you're just sitting there, minding your own business, just surfing the web maybe and all of a sudden you notice a lot of disk activity. This happens about a few times a day, and during that time of course, the machine is only a little slower. But it's usually pretty quick and benficial. No worries if you have a bad shutdown either, it's very unlikely for there to be anything wrong with the file system because of its journaling techniques.Red Squirrel wrote:Yep no pain and no downtime! But does that make it slower though? That's what I wonder.Magic wrote:
exactly. so the user doesn't have to go through the pain of doing it him or herself.![]()
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