Re: iDefrag program in Leopard
- From: "CZ" <CZ@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 22 Feb 2008 23:06:07 -0800
ok, so no actual tests and an unfamiliarity with fragmentation and hfs+.
nospam:
Wrong:
From O'Reilly's book "Running Mac OS X Tiger", p 187: when using OS X'sjournaling f/s:
Re: Auto defragging:
"When opened, if a file has > 8 fragments, and is < 20 MB in size, it is moved to contiguous disk space"
Re: Adaptive hot-file clustering:
Frequently read but rarely changed "small" files are moved to the fasted part of the hard disk
Files in that area that are not so qualified are moved from that area
From: http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25668
If your disks are almost full, and you often modify or create large files (such as editing video, but see the Tip below if you use iMovie and Mac OS X 10.3), there's a chance the disks could be fragmented. In this case, you might benefit from defragmentation, which can be performed with some third-party disk utilities.
Also, some Mac user have found defragging beneficial:
http://www.macupdate.com/reviews.php?id=16819
You are locked into the Mac not needing defragmentation, that is your issue. In some situations, OS X can benefit from defragmentation, even Apple admits it.
.
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