Announced by Chris Mason of Oracle in 2007, Btrfs (pronounced as "Butter FS") is a new generation of copy on write, snapshoting file system for Linux aims to replace the ext3 file system (the most commonly used file system in Linux nowadays) while removing a number of its limitations, particularly with respect to file size and total file system size.
The distinctive features of Btrfs include:
- Extent based file storage (264 maximum file size)
- Space-efficient packing of small files and indexed directories
- Dynamic inode allocation (no maximum number of files set at file system creation time)
- Writable snapshots
- Subvolumes (separate internal filesystem roots)
- Object-level mirroring and striping
- Checksums on data and metadata (multiple algorithms available)
- Strong integration with device mapper for multiple device support
- Online filesystem check and very fast offline filesystem check
- Efficient incremental backup and file system mirroring
Here are some of the benefits of Btrfs:
- Support for large storage, with maximum file size up to 16 EiB, maximum number of files is 264 and maximum volume size is 16 EiB.
- Ultra fast copy-on-write system which is capable of quickly creating snapshots of the state of the filesystem at any time.
- Online resizing possible to change the size of the file system while it is mounted and busy, such as shrinking the file system.
- Storage pools enabling the file system to span multiple devices.
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