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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers About Unix File creation time Post 302575349 by Corona688 on Monday 21st of November 2011 11:02:31 AM
Old 11-21-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by gaellafond
Thanks for this info Corona688 (and vbe),
Since Ext4 was part of the Kernel, I assumed it was a Unix FS. Obviously, I was wrong, it's only used with Linux. Sorry for the misunderstanding.
I don't know if it's true, but I read somewhere that only Ubuntu is currently shipped with Ext4 by default (the post might be a bit old, I don't remember). I suppose that's means that only Ubuntu can give you the creation time, as long as you don't explicitly choose Ext4 when you install Linux.
That's probably a bit old by now. Ubuntu adopted it early.

Good to know there's a better reason than peer pressure to use ext4, though, but there's more important considerations than features when picking a filesystem.
  • Is it safe?
  • Is it sane?
  • Is it portable?
  • Can it recover from errors?
  • Will it grind down into a sticky mass after a few years of use?

The answers for ext3 are generally 'yes', 'yes', 'yes', 'yes', and 'no'. You can't say that for a lot of experimental or higher-performance filesystems. Some are untested, some are picky about how they're used, xfs fsck blows up on 32-bit, the kernel driver for reiserfs didn't compile right on 64-bit for a long time, ls on reiserfs3 can take 5 seconds of thrashing once you've used it 2 years, etc, etc, etc. Unless there's a high performance need you can count on ext3 not betraying you in these ways. So most maintainers were happy to wait and see if ext4 was all it was cracked up to be.

Last edited by Corona688; 11-21-2011 at 12:52 PM..
 

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iv_timer(3)						    ivykis programmer's manual						       iv_timer(3)

NAME
iv_timer_register, iv_timer_unregister, iv_timer_registered - deal with ivykis timers SYNOPSIS
#include <iv.h> struct iv_timer { struct timespec expires; void *cookie; void (*handler)(void *); }; void IV_TIMER_INIT(struct iv_timer *timer); void iv_timer_register(struct iv_timer *timer); void iv_timer_unregister(struct iv_timer *timer); int iv_timer_registered(struct iv_timer *timer); DESCRIPTION
The functions iv_timer_register and iv_timer_unregister register, respectively unregister, a timer with the current thread's ivykis event loop. iv_timer_registered on a timer returns true if that timer is currently registered with ivykis. When a timer that is registered becomes 'ready', due to the current system clock value becoming greater than or equal to the timer's ->expires member field, the callback function specified by ->handler is called in the thread that the timer was registered in, with ->cookie as its first and sole argument. When this happens, the timer is transparently unregistered. The application is allowed to change the ->cookie and ->handler members at any time. The application is not allowed to change the ->expires member while the timer is registered. A given struct iv_timer can only be registered in one thread at a time, and a timer can only be unregistered in the thread that it was reg- istered from. There is no limit on the number of timers registered at once. See iv_examples(3) for programming examples. SEE ALSO
ivykis(3), iv_examples(3) ivykis 2010-08-15 iv_timer(3)
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