--- date: "2004-08-04T17:47:48Z" title: Big Friggin Files --- <p> Here's a handy list of maximum file sizes for various filesystems: </p> <blockquote cite='http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/Table_size.html'> <ul> <li>ext2/3: Filesystem up to 16 TB, individual files to 2 TB</li> <li>Reiserfs: Filesystem up to 17 TB, individual files to 2 TB.</li> <li>JFS: Filesystem up to 32 PB, individual files to 4 PB.</li> <li>XFS: Filesystem up to 16 EB, individual files to 8 EB.</li> <li>NTFS: Varies, but with default block size the maximum filesystem size is 16 TB. Files are limited only by the size of the volume.</li> </ul> <p> Note: The 2.4 Linux kernel has a 2 TB limitation on the size of a block device, so the very large limits above are, for the moment, theoretical. 2.5/2.6 should fix this limitation. </p> <p> <a href='http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/Table_size.html'>Source</a></p> </blockquote> <p> I also stumbled across <a href='http://mdbtools.sf.net/'>MDBTools</a>. It's a set of tools for reading Access files in real operating systems. Seems to be buggy at the moment, but it looks promising. </p>