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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers What should I format my SSD with? Post 302922842 by mrm5102 on Tuesday 28th of October 2014 03:54:23 PM
Old 10-28-2014
What should I format my SSD with?

Hello All,

I recently received a new SSD that I am going to use for the purpose of Booting Virtual Machines. I use VMWare Player to boot Windows Guest Operating Systems onto my Linux Laptop.

I currently have a SSD drive that I use for this exact same purpose that is formatted as ext3 and I'm wondering if I should format the new one with this same format? Is there preferred format to use for booting Virtual Machines? My current SSD has some age to it and is only 128 GB, and my new one is 256 GB.

Not sure if it's my OS or the drive itself or even the age of the Disk, but almost everyday palimpsest, *i.e. OpenSuSE's Disk Utility program, warns me about errors/issues in the SMART data. Usually if I go into the program and refresh the SMART data for that drive the error(s) go away so I'm not sure if the program is just not geared toward SSDs since some of the errors I don't think apply to SSD drives, like errors for SpinUp Time since SSD's have no moving parts, or even Head Flying Hours since SSD's don't have that either. Which is why I thought it was strange I would get errors on those specific things...

But anyway, what would be a preferred formatting option for an External SSD that will contain and run Virtual Machines from..?

Any thoughts or suggestions would be much appreciated!

Thanks in Advance,
Matt
 

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UPDATE-FLASHPLUGIN-NONFREE(8)				      System Manager's Manual				     UPDATE-FLASHPLUGIN-NONFREE(8)

NAME
update-flashplugin-nonfree - program to get the newest Adobe Flash Player SYNOPSIS
update-flashplugin-nonfree --install update-flashplugin-nonfree --uninstall DESCRIPTION
The program update-flashplugin-nonfree takes care of downloading last minute information from Debian about suitable versions, removing the installed Adobe Flash Plugin if it has been reported as insecure, or, if a newer suitable version is available, downloading a newer Adobe Flash Player and its installer from the Adobe download site, run the downloaded installer to install the Adobe Flash Player on the local system, and then move the installed files to where they fit on a Debian system. A copy of the downloaded .tar.gz is saved in /var/cache/flashplugin-nonfree for later reuse. The program update-flashplugin-nonfree is used in the postinst and prerm scripts of the Debian package, but this program can also be run manually by root. OPTIONS
--install To install, update or remove the Adobe Flash Player depending on downloaded last minute information from Debian about suitable ver- sions. --uninstall To remove the Adobe Flash Player. --verbose Produce detailed information about what's happening. --quiet Produce no informational output. SEE ALSO
http://wiki.debian.org/FlashPlayer If you subscribe to this wiki page, then you will receive updates via e-mail. http://www.adobe.com/ The Adobe homepage. August 15, 2007 UPDATE-FLASHPLUGIN-NONFREE(8)
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