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Technical information, File system formats – LaCie FIREWIRE 800/400 User Manual

Page 44

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LaCie Biggest Quadra

User Manual

page

Technical Information

7. Technical Information

7.1. File System Formats

Mac Users

Mac OS 10.x Users

You may customize the drive by reformatting and/or

partitioning the drive with separate file system formats.

For optimal performance in Mac OS environments, for-

mat and partition the drive as one large Mac OS Ex-

tended volume.

Mac OS Extended (HFS+)

Mac OS Extended refers to the file system used by

Mac OS 8.1 and later. HFS+ represents an optimization

of the older HFS file system by using hard disk space

more efficiently. With HFS+, you are no longer limited

by block size.

MS-DOS File System (FAT 32)

This is the Microsoft file system, more typically

known as FAT 32. This is the file system to use if you

are going to be using your LaCie Hard Drive between

Macs and Windows operating systems.

UNIX File System

This is the file system based on UNIX, and is pref-

erable for users developing UNIX-based applications

within Mac OS 10.x. Unless you have a specific reason

to use the UNIX File System, you should instead format

your drive using Mac OS Extended (HFS+), because it

provides Mac users with a more familiar operating ex-

perience.

ImpOrTANT INfO:

If you will be sharing

the hard drive between Mac and Windows oper-

ating environments, you will want to follow these

guidelines: Mac OS X prefers that all partitions be

the same format, therefore only the first FAT 32

partition is guaranteed to mount.

Mac OS 10.1.x -

Works reliably with FAT 32 partitions less than

32GB

Mac OS 10.2.x -

Works reliably with FAT 32 partitions less than

128GB
Does not mount FAT 32 partitions greater than

128GB

Mac OS 10.3.x -

Mounts any FAT 32 drive of any size
Mounts NTFS volumes as READ-only

TeChNICAl NOTe:

Mac OS 10.3.x Users -

Mac

OS Extended (Journaled) under Panther, Apple

introduced journaling to the Mac OS Extended

file system, which helps protect the file systems on

Mac OS volumes. When journaling is enabled, file

system transactions are maintained and recorded

continuously in a separate file, called a journal. In

the event of an unplanned shutdown, the OS uses

the journal to restore the file system. Journaling is

also backward compatible, and all volumes with

journaling enabled can be fully used by computers

not running Mac OS 10.3.x. For more informa-

tion, please visit Apple’s website.