hm... I curently use ext2 and I have installation in a partition of my sd card. wich fs would be better than ext2, given that I need quich r/w but as less writes as possible? On Jul 31, 2012 3:18 AM, "Leonardo Dagnino" <leodag.sch@gmail.com> wrote:
Well, I don't think it will "destroy" the flash... As it is made of NAND flash, I suppose that it reacts pretty much like an SSD. Anyway, it should take a considerable time until it wears out, and if you use it only to install an OS, it won't have any writes, what means that it shouldn't wear out for some years (or at least I hope so) For what I remember, btrfs uses a pretty big amount of space, what means more writes.
Leonardo Dagnino
Obs.: NAND flash only has a limited amount of erases/writes, not reads.
2012/7/30 Zhengyu Xu <xzy3186@gmail.com>
I've no idea on how btrfs performs with a flash disk actually. My btrfs partition just locates on a normal hdd so I have never thought about it :-)
Regards, Zhengyu Xu
On 2012-7-31, at 8:27, Δημήτρης Ζέρβας<01ttouch@gmail.com> wrote:
is it actually safe to format an usb flash to btrfs? won't it destroy the flash because of the read/writes? On Jul 31, 2012 2:20 AM, "Zhengyu Xu" <xzy3186@gmail.com> wrote:
Trying to install Arch on a USB key, I am having trouble getting a bootable system. I created a basic BTRFS filesystem and mounted it with SSD optimizations and compression. I didn't create any subvolumes or anything else that is said to be problematic when booting to a BTRFS filesystem. From that point, I followed the installation guide for a normal install. However, after reading the documentation for GRUB and Syslinux, my newly created install doesn't boot. I looked at the wiki entry for installing to a USB key, but it is still written for AIF and grub-legacy. However,
On Mon, 2012-07-30 at 17:36 -0400, Kyle wrote: the main difference I can find doesn't seem to apply, because although it mentions that the USB key where grub-legacy is installed is always hd0,0, grub2 is supposed to look for the UUID of the disk, which matches correctly in /boot/grub/grub.cfg. I also tried setting up this install to boot using Syslinux, but both bootloaders just drop me into some kind of shell and refuse to boot. Unfortunately, since I am
visually impaired and use speech to install and use Arch, I am unable to see whether I am in a "normal shell" or a rescue shell, or even what kind of issue the bootloaders are having that keeps them from finding a kernel. Should I be using a different filesystem other than BTRFS, even though both bootloaders are said to support it? Should I not be using compression on my filesystem? Could this be a problem that is entirely unrelated to the filesystem I'm using? Any help is greatly appreciated. ~Kyle
Did you add usb and btrfs to the hooks array in your mkinitcpio.conf?
Regards, Zhengyu Xu