On Fri, Jun 09, 2006 at 12:39:19PM -0700, Gerrit Huizenga wrote: > > PRECISELY. So you should stop modifying a filesystem whose design is > > admittedly _not_ modern! > > So just how long do you think it would take to get a modern filesystem > into the hands of real users, supported by the distros? From community > building, through design, development, testing, delivery? JFS is pretty nice because it has many adavanced features but still is rather simple. XFS has even more cool features such as a WIP parallel fsck and is proven on the biggest filesystems on COS operating systems out there, but as a disadvantage is hugely complex so outsiders have a hard time getting into it. So shortem the option I'd recommend is to start supporting XFS more broadly, because it's the high end filesystem that's out there today and fill the needs people have in the next five or so years. For the time after that we need to think about something that can scale aswell and better while beeing simpler. Also we need to start thinking about a clustered filesystem more, it might or might not make sense to have a cluster filesystem also do the next generation local filesystem thing. I'd probably start designing such a next gen fs by taking jfs and revamping it completely. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html