this post was submitted on 12 May 2024
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Indeed. But I think some confusion will still remain as long as the ntfs-3g FUSE driver is still included by distros. Because right now, you have to explicitly specify the filesystem type as
ntfs3
if you want to use the new in-kernel driver, otherwise it would usentfs-3g
. And most guides on the web still haven't been updated to usentfs3
in the fstab, so I'm afraid this confusion will continue to persist for some time.I've had bad experiences with
ntfs3
anyway, so it's probably for the best thatntfs-3g
is the default. Also last I checkedntfs3
had effectively been orphaned by paragon (the developers), is that still the case?ntfs3
has had several improvements in 6.2 and 6.8, and it's been pretty stable for me of late. I use it to share/backup my Steam game library mainly + for my portable drives for general data storage/local backups, and haven't had any issues.It's not orphaned. There was a bit of lull after it was introduced in kernel 5.15, and yes it was a bit unstable in the 5.x series, but it's been pretty good since 6.2 where they finally introduced the
nocase
andwindows_names
mount options. The performance improvements are worth it if you use NTFS heavily, so I would personally recommend switching.Ahh thanks! That's good to know!