On Fri, 9 Jun 2006, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Alex Tomas wrote:
> > > > > Linus Torvalds (LT) writes:
LT> Quite frankly, at this point, there's no way in hell I believe we can
LT> do major surgery on ext3. It's the main filesystem for a lot of users,
LT> and it's just not worth the instability worries unless it's something
LT> very obviously transparent.
I believe it's as stable as before until you mount with extents
mount option.
If it will remain a mount option, if it is never made the default (either in
kernel or distro level), then only 1% of users will ever use the feature.
And we shouldn't merge a 1% use feature into the _main_ filesystem for Linux.
Pardon me because I haven't made it all the way through this discussion
yet, so I don't know if this has been suggested or dismissed. But I'm
curious - rather than 'stealth upgrade' by way of mount options, why not
just enable the functionality either via tune2fs or mkfs.ext3?
New distribution versions could ship installers that enable it, because users
aren't really going to switch from a new distribution they just install to
an older version (same story on the kernel).
Users that want the functionality today can have it by asking for it with
tune2fs, they just have to bypass the warning that tells them they're not
going to be able to boot kernels before 2.6.xx
Jeff
Cheers,
Chase
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