Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-29 Thread Klaus Wolf
Hi, you may try fat32 for using on both systems. I made three partitions: ntfsuse with windows ext3use with lenny fat32 for data storage use for lenny and windows best regards and a nice day klaus Am Donnerstag, den 28.01.2010, 17:35 + schrieb Bhasker C

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-29 Thread Alex Samad
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 10:22:06AM +0100, Klaus Wolf wrote: Hi, you may try fat32 for using on both systems. I made three partitions: ntfsuse with windows ext3use with lenny fat32 for data storage use for lenny and windows I have reliable used ntfs-3g (fuse

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-29 Thread Tixy
On Fri, 2010-01-29 at 20:36 +1100, Alex Samad wrote: I have reliable used ntfs-3g (fuse based ntfs) to write to ntfs partitions with a zero defect rate I have to, but I have noticed that files get horribly fragmented and this doesn't get fixed by the Windows defrag program, or by deleting then

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-29 Thread Mark
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 1:22 AM, Klaus Wolf kl...@linuxwolf.de wrote: Hi, you may try fat32 for using on both systems. I made three partitions: ntfsuse with windows ext3use with lenny fat32 for data storage use for lenny and windows I second this as long

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-28 Thread Bhasker C V
On Sat, 23 Jan 2010, Bhasker C V wrote: Camaleón wrote: On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote: (...) So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both windows and also linux ? Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-28 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Fri,22.Jan.10, 22:28:26, Bhasker C V wrote: Anyone can recommend VFAT. FAT32 being supported by XP and well supported by linux makes it a good candidate. The problem with FAT32, I guess (correct me if I am wrong), there is no support for case-sensitive file names in the FAT32 file system.

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-24 Thread Camaleón
On Sat, 23 Jan 2010 22:19:44 +, Joe wrote: Bhasker C V wrote: Camaleón wrote: I wonder if nowadays UDF could be used to deal with this problematic :-? Tried it. UDF from udftools(1.0.0b2 ) on etch creates an UDF which is not working with windows. I am then left only with an

File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Bhasker C V
Hi, This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise, I think this would be a good reference for anybody. I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear information on what to do. The question is, if you want to share data between linux and

File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Bhasker C V
Hi, This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise, I think this would be a good reference for anybody. I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear information on what to do. The question is, if you want to share data between linux and

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Nick Douma
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On 23-1-2010 9:13, Bhasker C V wrote: Hi, This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise, I think this would be a good reference for anybody. I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Bhasker C V
Nick Douma wrote: -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On 23-1-2010 9:13, Bhasker C V wrote: Hi, This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise, I think this would be a good reference for anybody. I think this question has been debated a lot but still

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Rob Owens
On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 10:28:26PM +, Bhasker C V wrote: Hi, This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise, I think this would be a good reference for anybody. I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear information on what to do.

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Camaleón
On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote: (...) So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both windows and also linux ? Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also (meaning it can be read and optionally written-to in windows

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Bhasker C V
Camaleón wrote: On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote: (...) So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both windows and also linux ? Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also (meaning it can be read and optionally

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Alex Samad
On Sat, Jan 23, 2010 at 01:30:59PM +, Bhasker C V wrote: Nick Douma wrote: [snip] Using NTFS on linux and windows is cool. I have consistently seen that when there are large number of files, undoubtably, ntfs volume goes corrupt and chkdsk simply removes files and creates data loss. I

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Bhasker C V
Alex Samad wrote: On Sat, Jan 23, 2010 at 01:30:59PM +, Bhasker C V wrote: Nick Douma wrote: [snip] Using NTFS on linux and windows is cool. I have consistently seen that when there are large number of files, undoubtably, ntfs volume goes corrupt and chkdsk simply removes

Re: File system for linux and windows

2010-01-23 Thread Joe
Bhasker C V wrote: Camaleón wrote: On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote: (...) So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both windows and also linux ? Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also (meaning it can be read and