WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

1.2K

Archive: https://archive.today/lqqMk

From the post:

>The XFS file-system is ready to declare their online file-system checking "fsck" support in good enough shape for enabling by default in new kernel builds. Plus other XFS alterations ahead of Linux 6.18 that is expected to be this year's LTS kernel version. With the Linux 6.18 merge window set to kickoff in just a few weeks and then debut as stable in December, this will more than likely be the 2025 LTS kernel version. Typically it's the last major released kernel version of a given calendar year that goes on to become the Long Term Support (LTS) version. So with Linux 6.18 likely to be an LTS kernel release, XFS file-system developers have been making preparations for that assumption. Within the XFS development tree they have queued some Kconfig updates. First up they are now disabling by default two features they had planned to turn off as being previously deprecated: their V4 file-systems support and their long-broken ASCII case insensitive directories support.

Archive: https://archive.today/lqqMk From the post: >>The XFS file-system is ready to declare their online file-system checking "fsck" support in good enough shape for enabling by default in new kernel builds. Plus other XFS alterations ahead of Linux 6.18 that is expected to be this year's LTS kernel version. With the Linux 6.18 merge window set to kickoff in just a few weeks and then debut as stable in December, this will more than likely be the 2025 LTS kernel version. Typically it's the last major released kernel version of a given calendar year that goes on to become the Long Term Support (LTS) version. So with Linux 6.18 likely to be an LTS kernel release, XFS file-system developers have been making preparations for that assumption. Within the XFS development tree they have queued some Kconfig updates. First up they are now disabling by default two features they had planned to turn off as being previously deprecated: their V4 file-systems support and their long-broken ASCII case insensitive directories support.
[–] 0 pt

Every couple of months I have to repair my storage drives by running repair with the -L option to delete the log files that are corrupt or to big. It's a pain in the ass and should have been fixed before it left beta phase.