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| Safe OS for power on/off unexpectedly? |
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| ArcadEd:
--- Quote from: SirPoonga on November 04, 2005, 04:48:32 pm ---You know NTFS is a journaling file system and can handle just being turned off. --- End quote --- Just to clarify, can or can't? I always thought it was bad to just shutoff a NTFS machine. But I do know, like papas said, when I hit the power button on my xp machine it automatically goes through the shutdown process unless I actually hold it down to kill the power. |
| quarterback:
[code]NTFS is a journaling file system that uses database-like logging techniques in order to provide increased availability. Journaling file systems commit metadata changes to the file system in transactions. In the event of a power failure or system crash, NTFS quickly rolls back the uncommitted transactions and so is quickly able to return the filesystem back to a consistent state |
| ArcadEd:
Great, thanks :). |
| PacManFan:
It's not safe to just power off XP, which has a NTFS filesystem, I had to reboot my laptop the other week because it was acting really slow and sluggish. The task manager took like 2 minutes to appear, and I was in the process of trying to shut down. I got impatient, and did a hard reset with the power button. Windows XP started to reboot, and then it went to the BSOD, and into an endless cycle of rebooting. -Safe mode didn't work. -command prompt didn't work I had to build a Bart's recovery disk on another computer, and run a scandisk/fixdisk on my system to fix it. -PMF |
| Lilwolf:
I think the answer is DOS and Linux. NTFS is suppost to be... but just like windows is suppost to be reliable. Linux changed it FS about 7 years ago (time??) and now wont be effected by turnoffs. But this assumes your not writing a second at the moment you turn off the computer. No FS will change that. |
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