I meant 50 tb... Although gb is also true, I suppose. :-)

Sent from my Nexus 10.
On Oct 18, 2013 1:21 AM, "Andrew Dahl" <droidjd at gmail.com> wrote:

> A variety of reasons. The biggest one for me is stability. XFS has been
> doing huge filesystems (>50gb) for years. ext4 hasn't. Today, I'd probably
> trust ext4 to do a 16 TB fs, but I'd still prefer XFS.
>
> For larger filesystem, ext4 performance degrades rapidly while XFS
> continues to scale well.
>
> Here's a forum discussing this very topic:
> http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?t=1200201
>
> Sent from my Nexus 10.
> On Oct 17, 2013 10:36 PM, "Tony Yarusso" <tonyyarusso at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 7:47 PM, B-o-B De Mars <mr.chew.baka at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> > Up until now all my current file systems are <= 16TB,
>> > so ext4 has not been an issue.
>>
>> I'm curious why it's an issue beyond that point.  This indicates that
>> ext4 has supported filesystems larger than 16TB for nearly two years:
>>
>> http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net/e2fsprogs-release.html#1.42
>>
>> And Wikipedia says it now supports volumes up to 1EiB, or
>> 1,048,576TiB.  See also
>>
>> https://ext4.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Ext4_Howto#Bigger_File_System_and_File_Sizes
>> .
>>
>>  - Tony
>> _______________________________________________
>> TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
>> tclug-list at mn-linux.org
>> http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list
>>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20131018/ec505d47/attachment.html>