Fedora 11 and Ext4: The Straight Bits
Fedora 11, when released tomorrow, will be the first distribution to boast the inclusion of ext4, the latest incarnation in the extended file system family, as default. Ext4 brings with it support for larger filesystems, larger single file size and many improvements in almost every imaginable facet. Join me for an interview with Eric Sandeen, renown file system hacker, Red Hat Engineer and Fedora Contributor as he takes on a little trip down Filesystem Alley and explains what filesystems are, where did they come from, why should we care and why they along with Fedora 11 are prepping to take over the WOOOOORLD!
1. Please give is a quick self-introduction and how you got started working on Fedora/Red Hat and filesystems.
I was an electrical engineer by education & career years ago, but in the course of that work I started fiddling with Linux - Red Hat Linux (5?) was actually the first distro I ever used. I worked at SGI for about 6 years on the XFS filesystem, and then moved to Red Hat to work on ext3, ext4, XFS, and other filesystem related bits. I feel lucky to be able to have turned a fun hobby into a paid gig.
2. Practically, what is a filesystem and why should the average user care about what filesystem they are using?
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