Maybe this came as a surprise to you, but anyone who has used a
compact flash in a digital camera knows that you ***have*** to wait
until the led has gone out before trying to eject the flash card. I
remember seeing all sorts of horror stories from professional
photographers about how they lost an important wedding's day worth of
pictures with the attendant commercial loss, on various digital
photography forums. It tends to be the sort of mistake that digital
photographers only make once.
It actually comes as surprise to me. Actually yes and no. I know that
digital cameras use VFAT, so pulling CF card out of it may do bad
thing, unless I run fsck.vfat afterwards. If digital camera was using
ext3, I'd expect it to be safely pullable at any time.
Will IBM microdrive do any difference there?
Anyway, it was not known to me. Rather than claiming "everyone knows"
(when clearly very few people really understand all the details), can
we simply document that?
I really think that the expectation that all OS's (windows, mac, even
your ipod) all teach you not to hot unplug a device with any file system.
Users have an "eject" or "safe unload" in windows, your iPod tells you
not to power off or disconnect, etc.
That was before journaling filesystems...
I don't object to making that general statement - "Don't hot unplug a
device with an active file system or actively used raw device" - but
would object to the overly general statement about ext3 not working on
flash, RAID5 not working, etc...
You can object any way you want, but running ext3 on flash or MD RAID5
is stupid:
* ext2 would be faster
* ext2 would provide better protection against powerfail.
"ext3 works on flash and MD RAID5, as long as you do not have
powerfail" seems to be the accurate statement, and if you don't need
to protect against powerfails, you can just use ext2.
Pavel