On Wed, 2007-09-05 at 14:36 -0500, Scott Marlowe wrote:
> On 9/5/07, Trevor Talbot <quension@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On 9/5/07, Scott Marlowe <scott.marlowe@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > On 9/5/07, Carlo Stonebanks <stonec.register@sympatico.ca> wrote:
> > > > > Right, additionally NTFS is really nothing to use on any serious disc
> > > > > array.
> > > > Do you mean that I will not see any big improvement if I upgrade the disk
> > > > subsystem because the client is using NTFS (i.e. Windows)
I haven't had a corrupt NTFS filesystem is ages; even with hardware
failures. If NTFS was inherently unstable there wouldn't be hundreds of
thousands of large M$-SQL and Exchange instances.
> And there's the issue that with windows / NTFS that when one process
> opens a file for read, it locks it for all other users.
This isn't true; the mode of a file open is up to the application.
Possibly lots of Windows applications are stupid or sloppy in how they
manage files but that isn't a flaw in NTFS.
--
Adam Tauno Williams, Network & Systems Administrator
Consultant - http://www.whitemiceconsulting.com
Developer - http://www.opengroupware.org