Filesystem: Difference between revisions

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* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system#Disk_file_systems
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system#Disk_file_systems
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/find-out-what-filesystems-my-linux-kernel-supports/ How to find out what filesystems Linux kernel supports]
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/find-out-what-filesystems-my-linux-kernel-supports/ How to find out what filesystems Linux kernel supports]
* [https://www.educba.com/linux-file-system/ Top 7 Best Linux File system]: Ext4, '''BtrFS''' (high volume of data), JFS, ReiserFS, '''ZFS''' (dynamic disk striping and drive pooling), FAT32, exFAT.  
* [https://www.educba.com/linux-file-system/ Top 7 Best Linux File system]: Ext4, '''BtrFS''' (high volume of data), JFS, ReiserFS, '''ZFS''' (dynamic disk striping and drive pooling), FAT32, exFAT.
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/best-file-systems-for-installing-linux/ The 6 Best File Systems for Installing Linux]. ext4, Btrfs, ZFS, Reiser4, XFS, JFS


= squashfs =
= squashfs =

Revision as of 14:27, 9 July 2023

File systems

squashfs

squashfs is a heavy-compression based read-only filesystem that is capable of compressing 2 to 3 GB of data onto a 700MB. Linux liveCD are built using squashfs. These CDs make use of a read-only compressed filesystem which keeps the root filesystem on a compressed file. It can be loopback mounted and loads a complete Linux env. Thus when some file are required by processes, they are decompressed and loaded onto the RAM and used.

# create a squashfs file
sudo mksquashfs /etc test.squashfs 

# mount the squashfs file 
mkdir /mnt/squash
mount -o loop compressedfs.squashfs /mnt/squash
# you can acess the contents at /mnt/squashfs

# exclude files 
sudo mksquashfs /etc test.squashfs -e /etc/passwd /etc/shadow
# or specify a list of exclude files given in a file
cat excludelist  # /etc/passwd
sudo mksquashfs /etc test.squashfs -ef excludelist

Btrfs

COW (copy on write) file system

The cow filesystem was found on xubuntu live CD. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write

How To Protect Your Server Against the Dirty COW Linux Vulnerability (10/21/2016)