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#1 |
Power Member
Feb 2006
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One of the biggest enemies of a hard drive is fragmentation. This is a big problem with using a desktop computer or a laptop. When using a ps3, is the hard drive subject to fragmentation and if so, is it a concern?
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#3 |
Power Member
Feb 2006
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I didn't know that.
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#6 |
Special Member
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I'd really like to see supporting facts regarding such a general statement. Perhaps the PS3 indexes all the files on the hard drive... but if you are able to delete files on the hard drive and add files to the hard drive, it's invariably going to cause gaps between data. So the question is does the PS3 automatically compensate for this, and if so, how?
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#7 |
Active Member
Feb 2008
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I'm not so sure about any of this.
You see , on the MAC osx, the hard drives if used exclusively in OSX do not fragment the same way and not as much. If PS3 OS is any bit similar (based closer to unix/linux than windows) then perhaps it won't be a problem. If there is any clarity out there , I'd like to know. |
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#8 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I agree. It doesn't have an entire computer OS architecture to deal with, and it is not windows based... so it is likely to not have the same problem. I defrag my PC every month, I rarely defrag my mac... I think I do that once a year.
The PS3 mostly has the OS, game/music/movie/photo data, and updates. It should be easy enough to prevent fragmenting on the game/music/movie/photo files. |
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#9 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Maybe a backup, format, restore would work (if it -- defrag -- is even needed and I doubt that it is).
Anyway, I use to have a really good link on this that explained why it's more of an issue for Windows and not that much of a problem for linux/UNIX. I can't seem to find it now though. Here's another explanation that I just found on why Linux (and UNIX) computers don't normally have to deal with this. http://geekblog.oneandoneis2.org/ind..._defragmenting If you look up defragmentation on wiki, it touches on it as well. Is the PS3 based on linux or do they just support it being installed and use some custom/proprietary solution. If it's not based on linux, the above may not be applicable but without an option to defrag, I'd think they must be handling it in some manner or they're using something that doesn't need it. Last edited by owa; 04-23-2008 at 05:05 PM. |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Guru
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every hard drive regardless of the OS or the system that it is installed in will fragment over time! It is an evil that will not go away due to the way that information is stored on them.
If you have a brand new hard drive and save a file to it that is 5k. that save file will take up spaces 1 thru 5. now if you save another file that is 5k it will take up the next 5 spaces. so you now have the first 10 spaces of that hard drive taken up. Now if you delete the the first save you made the first 5 spaces will open up again. Next thing you save is 6k.....the comp will look and will see that the first 5 spaces are open and will place 5k of the 6k in those spaces, the extra 1k will go after the second save you made and will be placed in space 11, giving you fragmentation. no matter what system you are using this will happen....not thru fault of the os but it is a limitation of hard drive technology. So wether you have xp or osx or just a few folders to deal with like the ps3 (movie/music) etc you will get fragmentation, which over time will slow down your system....i bet that in a future firmware update a defrag option will be available |
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#11 | |
Power Member
Feb 2006
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#13 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Thanks for the link. Yes hard drives of all types will/can fragment if they get too full, but windows is particularly bad at it and needs a defrag tool to keep things running smoothly, while other systems don't need it as much. If it ever gets to a point that your stuff won't fit on your PS3 or it gets fragmented, backup everything and put in a bigger drive. If the backup tool stores the fragmenting than you should backup stuff manually. I doubt that would be a problem though. I just added a 160GB to my PS3 and love it! |
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#14 |
Power Member
Feb 2006
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#16 |
Active Member
Jul 2007
Central NH
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They may use write combining where files are optimized each time they are used (like the MacOSX) so that they are not fragmented.
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#18 |
Blu-ray Guru
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i am pretty sure sony would not include something that would/could compromise the ps3. I am sure their group of developers will be more than capable of making a good defrag program
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#20 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The operating system is stored in flash memory right? Therefore the only files that would be defragged are those that you put on it. If I defrag my external drive it hardly does anything and thats got tons of files on it.
If all the files you put on it are huge, defragging isn't going to be a problem. The PS3 performance so far is perfect, I don't see how much better performance could be. |
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