Faili:File system fragmentation.png

File_system_fragmentation.png(piseli 490 × 210, saizi ya faili: 9 KB, aina ya MIME: image/png)

Faili hili linatoka Wikimedia Commons. Maelezo yapo kule kwenye ukurasa wake wa maelezo unaonekana hapo chini.
Commons ni mahali mtandaoni pa kuhifadhia jalada na hati za picha na sauti zenye leseni huria. Unaweza kuisadia.

Muhtasari

Example of how file systems become fragmented. The following is from the article of the same name on Wikipedia:

A blank disk has 5 files, A, B, C, D and E each using 10 blocks of space (for this section, a block is an allocation unit of that system, it could be 1K, 100K or 1 megabyte and is not any specific size). On a blank disk, all of these files will be allocated one after the other. (Example (1) on the image.) If file B is deleted, there are two options, leave the space for B empty and use it again later, or compress all the files after B so that the empty space follows it. This could be time consuming if there were hundreds or thousands of files which needed to be moved, so in general the empty space is simply left there, marked in a table as available for later use, then used again as needed. (Example (2) on the image.) Now, if a new file, F, is allocated 7 blocks of space, it can be placed into the first 7 blocks of the space formerly holding the file B and the 3 blocks following it will remain available. (Example (3) on the image.) If another new file, G is added, and needs only three blocks, it could then occupy the space after F and before C. (Example (4) on the image). Now, if subsequently F needs to be expanded, since the space immediately following it is no longer available, there are two options: (1) add a new block somewhere else and indicate that F has a second extent, or (2) move the file F to someplace else where it can be created as one contiguous file of the new, larger size. The latter operation may not be possible as the file may be larger than any one contiguous space available, or the file conceivably could be so large the operation would take an undesirably long period of time, thus the usual practice is simply to create an extent somewhere else and chain the new extent onto the old one. (Example (5) on the image.) Repeat this practice hundreds or thousands of times and eventually the file system has many free segments in many places and many files may be spread over many extents. If, as a result of free space fragmentation, a newly created file (or a file which has been extended) has to be placed in a large number of extents, access time for that file (or for all files) may become excessively long.

Hatimiliki

Public domain This work has been released into the public domain by its author, Rfc1394. This applies worldwide.

Katika nchi zingine hii haiwezekani kisheria; kama ni hivyo:
Rfc1394 grants anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts Kiingereza

Historia ya faili

Bonyeza tarehe/saa kuona faili kama ilivyoonekana wakati huo.

Tarehe/SaaPicha ndogoVipimoMtumiajiMaelezo
sasa hivi13:12, 9 Aprili 2007Picha ndogo ya toleo la 13:12, 9 Aprili 2007490 × 210 (9 KB)Rfc1394Example of how file systems become fragmented. (Explanation to be added later) {{Pd-user|Rfc1394}}

Ukurasa huu umeunganishwa na faili hili:

Matumizi ya faili ulimwenguni

Wiki nyingine hutumia faili hizi: