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Old 06-21-2006   #1 (permalink)
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partition types for different data

So got hold of kanotix, relly nice. Now I need to move all my data from the cursed ntfs drives to something linux will also be able to write to. But how should i partition the drives?
I read that for big files like video (700-1200mb) xfs was better than reiserfs or ext3, but dont know if this is true.
I have a 250 gb drive that need to hold mp3 files (thats a lot of small files), another 250 gb needs to hold big videofiles, -what partition system should be used on these disks?

-and when i format them, how do i make them accesible to all users?

thanks, zonker
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Old 06-21-2006   #2 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zonker66
I have a 250 gb drive that need to hold mp3 files (thats a lot of small files),
Still, mp3 (2-5 mb) are not considered small files, so ReiserFS will not be that efficient with them (it likes < 1000k files).

Quote:
Originally Posted by zonker66
another 250 gb needs to hold big videofiles, -what partition system should be used on these disks?
I hear XFS is very good for that. But personaly I prefer the good old EXT3, which is an all-around performer, as well as being very reliable and flexible.

Some documentation :
http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/388
http://fsbench.netnation.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem

Quote:
Originally Posted by zonker66
-and when i format them, how do i make them accesible to all users?
A simple entry in /etc/fstab should do the trick.
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Old 06-22-2006   #3 (permalink)
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ok, thanks, i formatted two 250gb with xfs and one with ext3, and moved the data, all went fine.
Now i would like that my user profile has read/write acess to the disks when i log in, not only as root , but how do i do that?
Can i create a group that includes me and assignn read/write access to that group, or do i have to change the owner from root to me? or is there another preferable way to do that?
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Old 06-22-2006   #4 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zonker66
Now i would like that my user profile has read/write acess to the disks when i log in, not only as root , but how do i do that?
What is the content of /etc/fstab?

This disk is physically in your computer? (if so, the "defaults" mount options should give your user access).

Make sure the permissions on the drive are OK :
Code:
man chmod
Make sure the drive is mounted OK :
Code:
man mount
and

Code:
man fstab
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Old 06-22-2006   #5 (permalink)
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thanks for the instant reply! im still formatting and moving data (i have 9 hds to manage). The hds are all in the machine, i just persumed that only root had write acess to anything except home folder. Ill use the man pages and only return if i get totally lost,
thx again
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