1.8 - Filesystems Flashcards

1
Q

File systems

A
  • Before data can be written to the partition,
    it must be formatted
    – Build the foundation
  • Operating systems expect data to be written
    in a particular format
    – FAT32 and NTFS are popular
  • Many operating systems can read
    (and perhaps write) multiple file system types
    – FAT, FAT32, NTFS, exFAT, etc.
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2
Q

FAT

A
  • FAT - File Allocation Table
    – One of the first PC-based file systems (circa 1980)
  • FAT32 - File Allocation Table
    – Larger (2 terabyte) volume sizes
    – Maximum file size of 4 gigabytes
  • exFAT - Extended File Allocation Table
    – Microsoft flash drive file system
    – Files can be larger than 4 gigabytes
    – Compatible across many operating systems
    – Windows, Linux, macOS
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3
Q

NTFS

A
  • NTFS – NT File System
    – Extensive improvements over FAT32
    – Quotas, file compression, encryption, symbolic links,
    large file support, security, recoverability
  • Not very compatible across operating systems
    – Many OSes will read NTFS (but not write)
    – Some have limited write functionality to
    an NTFS file system
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4
Q

Other file systems

A
  • ext3 - Third extended file system
    – Commonly used by the Linux OS
  • ext4 - Fourth extended file system
    – An update to ext3
    – Commonly seen in Linux and Android OS
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5
Q

APFS

A
  • Apple File System (APFS)
    – Added to macOS High Sierra (10.12.4)
    – Also included with iOS and iPadOS
  • Optimized for solid-state storage
    – Encryption, snapshots, increased data integrity
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