Dear all,

please forgive me if the question has been answered previously, but I did a
quick search (due to lack of time) on this mailing list and google  and
couldn't find a relevant post.

I have an external hard drive where I would like to save my Windows files
and also create incremental backups for Linux. The problem is that
incremental backups cannot be created in the default HPFS/NTFS file system
of the hard drive. Is it possible to format the drive to a file system (i.e.
VFAT or FAT32) which would be read by Windows but could also save Linux
incremental backups? Which file system is that? The program I use for
backing up is rdiff-backup.

If there isn't any such file system, in what way could I create 2 partitions
just for backing up (no OS will be installed), one of which will be mounted
by Windows (i.e. NTFS) and the other by Linux (i.e. ext4) using a
partitioning program like GParted?

I would greatly appreciate any advice!

Thomas
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