[Keith Henderson: OFF: Questions for techies]
Paul Mather
paul at GROMIT.DLIB.VT.EDU
Fri Oct 30 09:21:20 EDT 2009
On Oct 30, 2009, at 8:29 AM, Carl Edlund Anderson wrote:
> On 29 Oct 2009, at 12:04 , Jeff Thompson wrote:
>>> If you are just storing MP3s/AACs, the file sizes may be small, so
>>> you might not run into any problems when plugging a Windows-
>>> formatted drive into a Mac. However, I would investigate the
>>> issue in greater depth if you really wanted cross-platform
>>> compatability. (I don't -- I just use my drives with my Macs --
>>> so it hasn't mattered to me.)
>>
>> I don't have a problem with it ... my FAT formatted drive serves my
>> Mac's 100 gig iTunes library. But I convert my FLAC files to AAC
>> to play in the iPod and then just to play those instead, so I am
>> not using files that are huge than 20 or 30 megabytes for
>> something the length of an album side like Jethro Tull's "Thick
>> as a Brick."
>
>
> Well, I have had FAT-formatted drives choke and crash when
> transferring big ol' files on and off -- like a FLAC or Apple
> Lossless version of a side of "Thick as a Brick". Online
> investigation revealed there could be some problems with large file
> sizes and FAT drives in cross-platform context -- I didn't really
> look into it deeply, as I just reformatted the drives to NTFS and
> restored the material from backup! But there are, clearly,
> situations where that might be problematic .... Anyway, that's just
> been my experience! :)
FAT-formatted filesystems do have size limitations: the maximum file
size is 4 GB, which means it is not a good medium for mastering ISO
files for burning to DVD (which would be larger than 4 GB if you
filled the DVD space).
FAT is also less robust to crashes than alternative file systems, and
so is more susceptible to corruption should you suffer, say, a power
failure when writing data. The FAT design also leads it to be prone
to problems of fragmentation, which can slow down I/O and negatively
affect performance on large disks.
NTFS---the standard file system under Windows---is problematic because
Microsoft keep secret its innards, typically only licensing read-only
drivers for other platforms. But, that's not to say you can't get
read-write support for other systems, often in the form of the
wonderful, reverse-engineered NTFS-3G driver (http://
www.ntfs-3g.org/). (Mac users might also like to know that Snow
Leopard contains NTFS write support, though it is disabled by default,
possibly because it is not considered production-ready.) So,
formatting an external drive as NTFS is a good option nowadays, and,
in doing so, you overcome the 4 GB file size limitation, as well as
the performance and reliability issues that accompany FAT.
Cheers,
Paul.
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