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Thread: file system compress

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    file system compress

    As SSD are getting more proliferate and considering that they are still restricted on size I seems to be reasonable to have transparent file system compression in the same way as NTFS supplies. Is this part of the current kernel? will it be? I'm currently writing this on a 12GB EeePC901.
    Can I use compression already?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    12

    Re: file system compress

    Quote Originally Posted by th00ht View Post
    As SSD are getting more proliferate and considering that they are still restricted on size I seems to be reasonable to have transparent file system compression in the same way as NTFS supplies. Is this part of the current kernel? will it be? I'm currently writing this on a 12GB EeePC901.
    Can I use compression already?
    btrfs is included (marked as "experimental") in recent kernels, I believe, and supports some compression.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    5,767
    Distro
    Ubuntu Development Release

    Re: file system compress

    I've been using btrfs as my primary filesystem for well over a year now, however, there is still no easy way of doing a Ubuntu installation onto a btrfs compressed drive.

    The standard Ubuntu installation routine doesn't let you specify filesystem options, the only way that I've found to get Ubuntu installed with the btrfs compression option turned on is to use debootstrap after mounting the correct partitions with the compress=lzo option.

    For more information, the best source (as always) is the Arch Linux wiki...

    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Btrfs
    Cheesemill

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