Re: the " 'official' point of view" expressed by kernelnewbies.orgregarding reiser4 inclusion

From: David Masover
Date: Mon Jul 31 2006 - 15:58:14 EST


Jan-Benedict Glaw wrote:
On Mon, 2006-07-31 12:17:12 -0700, Clay Barnes <clay.barnes@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 20:43 Mon 31 Jul , Jan-Benedict Glaw wrote:
On Mon, 2006-07-31 20:11:20 +0200, Matthias Andree <matthias.andree@xxxxxx> wrote:
Jan-Benedict Glaw schrieb am 2006-07-31:
[Crippled DMA writes]
Massive hardware problems don't count. ext2/ext3 doesn't look much better in
such cases. I had a machine with RAM gone bad (no ECC - I wonder what
They do! Very much, actually. These happen In Real Life, so I have to
I think what he meant was that it is unfair to blame reiser3 for data
loss in a massive failure situation as a case example by itself. What

Crippling a few KB of metadata in the ext{2,3} case probably wouldn't
fobar the filesystem...

Probably. By the time a few KB of metadata are corrupted, I'm reaching for my backup. I don't care what filesystem it is or how easy it is to edit the on-disk structures.

This isn't to say that having robust on-disk structures isn't a good thing. I have no idea how Reiser4 will hold up either way. But ultimately, what you want is the journaling (so power failure / crashes still leave you in an OK state), backups (so when blocks go bad, you don't care), and performance (so you can spend less money on hardware and more money on backup hardware).
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