Comment by rcxdude
7 months ago
That doesn't really match my recollection of timeline. I remember xfs being mentioned in the same sources contemporary with reiserfs (it predates ext3, even!). ZFS is about a decade newer, but not by much, and was probably the main reason most people would pay any real attention to their filesystem at that point, since it meaningfully added features not available in anything else at that point. BTRFS was basically a 'let's build the same thing, but in linux', but seems to have kinda stalled in terms of reliability (or at least in terms of reputation), and bcachefs is very much the new kid on the block, but seems to have a little bit more of a focus on getting to the reliability of ZFS, but it certainly is still not something to trust even as much as BTRFS. So it doesn't really feel like a cambrian explosion, more a new filesystem every ~5 years or so at a reasonably steady pace.
(pretty much the 3 filesystems I think about ATM are ext4 as a standard boot drive, zfs for large, long-lived data storage, and FAT/exFAT for interoperability with windows. It'd have to be a pretty niche use-case for me to consider another option. BcacheFS sounds really interesting but only to experiment with right now)
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