> Can't agree with that.  USB Thumb Drives for instance are still one of the
> most common ways to transport sessions and other data and are often
> formatted FAT32 for interoperability purposes.
>
>           Seablade

Luckily tar files do support symlinks. Some folks even create a ext2
fs formatted loopback file on the fat32 partition.

Of course it's a problem if you try to extract that tar file onto a fat32.

Cheers,
Tim
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