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Apr 17th, 2002, 08:52 AM
#1
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Ntfs/fat32
I'm gonna be installing Win2k as a primary OS for a system. I might want to be able to view the file system using other OSes at some point in the future.
Is there a significant performance difference between NTFS and FAT32 under Win2k?
Harry.
"From one thing, know ten thousand things."
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Apr 17th, 2002, 09:08 AM
#2
-= B u g S l a y e r =-
MSDN
Overview of Windows 2000 File Systems
The file system you use with Windows 2000 determines which of the operating system's advanced features are available to you. To use a Windows 2000-based computer to startup in Microsoft® MS-DOS®, Microsoft® Windows® 3.x, or Microsoft® Windows® 95, use FAT16. For a multiple-boot configuration with Microsoft® Windows® 95 OSR2 or Microsoft® Windows® 98 using very large volumes, you might want to use FAT32. If you are concerned with disk security, performance, and efficiency, you might choose NTFS.
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Apr 17th, 2002, 09:25 AM
#3
-= B u g S l a y e r =-
havent been able to find any "performance comparison report though" 
hard to tell how much difference there would be.
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Apr 17th, 2002, 09:25 AM
#4
PowerPoster
NTFS is more robust but for small partitions (say under 10GB) it is slower and requires more space than FAT32.
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Apr 17th, 2002, 09:43 AM
#5
Fanatic Member
http://people.msoe.edu/~barnicks/cou...rm%20Paper.pdf
NTFS actually offers better performance on Drives over 400mb, which is everything these days. I would personally go for NTFS, but if you need to have a dual boot, or have networked PCs read the drives as well, FAT32 might be better.
Iain, thats with an i by the way!
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Apr 17th, 2002, 10:01 AM
#6
PowerPoster
Originally posted by Iain17
NTFS actually offers better performance on Drives over 400mb,
really, that small? Didn't know that
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Apr 17th, 2002, 10:03 AM
#7
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Hey, my title was all-caps and vBulletin changed it. Ah well.
Maybe I'll make an NTFS partition for the OS, applications and swap file, and stick all my data on a FAT32 partition.
Harry.
"From one thing, know ten thousand things."
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Apr 17th, 2002, 10:17 AM
#8
PowerPoster
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Apr 17th, 2002, 11:02 AM
#9
Fanatic Member
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Apr 17th, 2002, 11:21 AM
#10
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Thanks for the link, Chris.
Harry.
"From one thing, know ten thousand things."
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Apr 17th, 2002, 11:27 AM
#11
Black Cat
NTFS is also a journaled file system (think the way an SQL DB uses transactions), and supports security. Its worth it just to be able to set user permissions on a file by file basis.
Josh
Get these: Mozilla Opera OpenBSD
I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.
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Apr 17th, 2002, 05:20 PM
#12
Hyperactive Member
Harry Said
"I might want to be able to view the file system using other OSes at some point in the future. "
So if the other OS is Windows 98,Linux etc.. You must have to use FAT32 because they can't see a NTFS File System.
The NTFS driver for Linux is slightly buggy and I won't count on it.
http://linux-ntfs.sourceforge.net/status.html
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Apr 17th, 2002, 06:10 PM
#13
Frenzied Member
One problem with NTFS. If your Windows install screws over, you are royally ****ed, since you have to nuke the ENTIRE partition, deleting everything on it, recreate it, reformat it, and reinstall.
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Apr 17th, 2002, 08:42 PM
#14
Hyperactive Member
If you want a recovery option there is always ....
NTFSDOS (Read only access)
http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/fr.../NTFSDOS.shtml
which helped me to get back important files stuck up in a ruined NTFS partition. I just copied this program to my dos boot disk, booted from it and copied all the files in the NTFS partition to a FAT32 partition.
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Apr 18th, 2002, 11:06 AM
#15
Black Cat
Yeah, I've used that too. Works great.
And couldn't you have one partition NTFS, another FAT32, another ext3, etc.
Josh
Get these: Mozilla Opera OpenBSD
I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.
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