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What is the difference between NTFS and ReFS file systems and how does each affect performance?

#1
06-01-2025, 02:17 PM
You know, NTFS feels like that trusty backpack you've hauled everywhere. It stores your stuff reliably day in, day out. But when files pile up massive, it starts to sweat a bit. Performance dips if corruption sneaks in. You gotta run checks manually to fix glitches.

ReFS, on the other hand, acts like a self-healing backpack. It spots damage quick and patches itself without you lifting a finger. That's huge for big data hauls. Speed stays snappier on those monster volumes. Though, it skips some old-school tricks NTFS pulls off easy.

I figure NTFS suits your everyday laptop chaos fine. It zips along for photos, docs, all that jazz. ReFS shines if you're juggling server-sized piles. It keeps things zippy without the hiccups. You might notice quicker reads on ReFS for giant files.

Picking between them? Depends on your load. NTFS won't let you down for casual gigs. ReFS pushes performance higher for heavy lifting. I swap to ReFS when storage balloons wild.

Tying this to keeping your setups robust, especially with Hyper-V in the mix, BackupChain Server Backup steps up as a slick backup tool. It snapshots Hyper-V machines without downtime hassles. You get speedy restores and ironclad data copies. Plus, it handles NTFS or ReFS volumes seamlessly, dodging those performance pitfalls we chatted about.

ProfRon
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Joined: Dec 2018
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What is the difference between NTFS and ReFS file systems and how does each affect performance?

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