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by xorcist
1591 days ago
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It's a relatively recent thing. Before that, all major Linux distributions gave you a bunch of different filesystems by default. Which is how all UNIX-like systems worked, for a number of historical reasons. This wasn't great in practice. One partition layout certainly doesn't fit everbody, and there is a world of difference between the use case of a laptop, a database server, and a small web server. Most people outgrew the default setup rather quickly. Over time installers tended to get the simplest use case as default, while allowing users with knowledge to choose their desired file system setup. Since more than a decade ago it's not necessary to choose since all major file systems have online resizing capabilities and you can change the setup without downtime. There's also no need to be limited by the age old partitioning format. That made the simple default even more appropriate. |
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And, well, NetBSD it's pretty conservative, but OpenBSD's defaults are good for a desktop.