« Отговор #6 -: Nov 04, 2005, 14:47 »
Здравей,
Сега пак погледнах (в Google) и се сетих за какво беше ограничението от 2GB - то е при ползване на "samba" (накратко някакъв човек си беше направих архив > 2GB и без да го провери го прехвърлил на друга машина с идея след това да го възстанови) - уви всичко било загубено. Всички данни след 2GB се губят, но без съобщение. Виж "linux+4GB+size" в Google.
Ако пък потърсиш с "linux+2GB+limit" ще ти даде връзки към неща, където се споменава за необходимост от LFS (Large File Support) в ядрото за да работи, виж ги сам.
Не съм гледал подробно връзките,но това изглежда е проблема.
PS: ето и нещо от форум на "nero linux":
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Let's correct this. Older versions of linux DID have a size limit of 2GB, however, that disappeared with 2.4.0 release. Yes you have to have LFS (Large File Support) compiled in kernel, but that option is compiled in all default kernels NeroLinux is supposed to support..
I really doubt anyone uses these old old linux distros except some corporate users that are too cheap to switch to somthing newer, even though, these users must at least have updated thier kernel to somthing newer.
Come on.. let's remove this stupid limitation (or at least give us the option to disable it in runtime)
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I don't think that you really want to get rid of the 2GB limit. It's not a Windows, Linux, or even Mac X limitation. It's because the DVD format was grandfathered into the now ancient CD ISO 9660 standard for compatiblity with CDs. ISO 9660 only allows for 32 bit file names. Problem is ISO 9660 is the only "real" hardware standard so far for DVDs. Joliet makes some half-hearted attempts at patching the 32-bit limit by adding extentions. UDF format is a mainly now just software standard that very few hardware devices understand in firmaware. Devices need to patched with codecs or plugins understand all the weird varieties of formats we try to use to get around the ISO 9660 limit. Whenever you write DVD now with files referenced by more than 32-bits you're going to run the risk of non-compatiblity issues. We'll have to wait until the DVD Wars are over (Blue Ray, DVD-HD, or whatever) until we see a true "standard" for handling big files on DVDs.
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Успех.Румен