Instead of just fixing bugs that pop up, we can also "think ahead". Even
though nobody has a 4Tb drive yet, we might prepare for the fact that a
few years from now, they will be common.

Similarly, my report warns about the consequences of certain design
decisions.

Yes, I have an extreme number of files. I've had "many files" for a long
time. I remember my PC-XT hitting the 2000 files limit of "norton
commander".

There are always people with "extreme" configurations that run into
problems that normal people won't hit soon. But "what is normal" will
grow. Ten years ago PCs had 20-30Gb of disk space and 1T was outrageous.
Nowadays many new PCs come with a 1T disk.

How do I end up with that many files? I make backups. I use rsync to
create a copy of my data. Then I cp -lr the data to a directory tagged
with the current date. I end up with a copy of the filesystem at every
backup-date. And files that don't change don't take up much space.

Thus I can look back at what my filesystem looked like at every point in
time.

I believe backuppc does something similar (but it didn't exist/do this
back when I started backing up like this).

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/397745

Title:
  fsck takes ages with one large partition

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