I’m going to join madduck, Gunnar Wolf and Julien with their negative experiences with XFS.

The celeron 412 I mentioned before had an XFS filesystem since a few years. It replaced a raisswolffs.

It certainly worked better than raiser. But as said, that old machine has been crashing, and when I copied over the data for my dad to his new machine, I noticed that his .gconf file was destroyed by XFS. All 0-bytes, typical for XFS. If the file is damaged, just fill it up with zeroes? I’ve seen 0-bytes a couple of times before in log files on XFS partitions that were open during a crash. It sucks that gconf didn’t keep a backup.

Anyway, the .gconf file includes his evolution configuration, amonst other stuff. Thats how we noticed (apart from all other gnome settings being gone, too), since restoring evolution was the top priority item for me.

Fortunately, I picked ext3 when setting up the new system. I never had experiences with ext2 or ext3 as bad as with xfs. Or reiserfs, which just trashed the whole filesystem when I ran “reiserfsck”. Thats not what a fsck is supposed to do, is it?