• @rdri
    link
    English
    -526 days ago

    NTFS also has a 255 limit, but it’s UTF16, so for unicode, you will get more out of it.

    I think this is a biased way of putting it. NTFS way is easy to understand and therefore manage. What’s more important is that ASCII basically means English only. I’ve seen enough of such “discrimination” (stuff breaks etc.) based on used language in software/technology and it should end for good.

    All other modernly maintained OS do UTF8, which “won” unicode.

    UTF8 is Unicode. UTF8 symbols can take more than 1 byte.

    Plus all the other things Linux has over Windows of course.

    There are also encryption methods that slash maximum length of each filename even further.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      5
      edit-2
      26 days ago

      Of course UTF8 is Unicode. The cool thing about UTF8 is that is ASCII, until it isn’t. It cover all of Unicode, but doesn’t need any bloat if you are just doing latin characters. Plus UTF8 will seamless go through ASCII code and things that understand it do, others just have patches of jibberish, but still work otherwise. It’s a way better approach. Better legacy handling and more efficient packing for latin languages. Which is why it “won” out. UTF16 pretty much only exists in Windows because it’s legacy it will be hard for it to escape.

      LUKS is by far the most common encryption setup on Linux. It’s done at block layer and the filesystem doesn’t know about it. No effect of filename length, or anything else.

      • @rdri
        link
        English
        -226 days ago

        None of that helps or discards anything I’ve said above. But it allows to say that NTFS limit can be basically 1024 bytes. Just because you like what UTF-8 offers it doesn’t solve hurdles with Linux limits.

        LUKS is commonly used but not the only one.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          2
          edit-2
          25 days ago

          Linus’s VFS is where the 256 limit is hard. Some Linux filesystem, like RaiserFS, go way beyond it. If it was a big deal, it would be patched and widely spread. The magic of Linux, is you can try it yourself, run your own fork and submit patches.

          LUKS is the one to talk about as the others aren’t as good an approach in general. LUKS is the recommended approach.

          Edit: oh and NTFS is 512 bytes. UTF16 = 16bit = 2 bytes. 256*2 = 512

          • @rdri
            link
            English
            025 days ago

            The magic of Linux, is you can try it yourself, run your own fork and submit patches.

            Well it should probably go further and offer more of another kind of magic - where stuff works as user expects it to work.

            As for submitting patches, it sounds like you suggest people play around and touch core parts responsible for file system operations. Such an advice is not going to work for everyone. Open source software is not ideal. It can be ideal in theory, but that’s it.

            LUKS is the one to talk about as the others aren’t as good an approach in general. LUKS is the recommended approach.

            It looks like there are enough use cases where some people would not prefer LUKS.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              125 days ago

              I have lived quite happily, on pretty much only open source for over 12 years now. Professionally and at home (longer at home). Debian I put with Wikipedia as an example of what humans can be.

              There is no gate keepers in who can do what where. Only on who will accept the patches. Projects fork for all kinds of reasons, though even Google failed to fork the Linux kernel. If there is some good patch to extend the filename limit, it will get in. Enough pressure and maybe the core team of that subsystem will do it.

              Open source already won I’m affriad. Most of the internet, IoT to super computers, runs open source. Has been that way for a while. If you use Windows, fine, but it is just a consumer end node OS for muggels. 😉

              If you setup a new install, and say you want encryption, LUKS is what you get.

              • @rdri
                link
                English
                125 days ago

                Does it look like I advocate for windows? Nah.

                Open source is great when it works. “If there is some good patch…” and “Enough pressure and maybe…” is the sad reality of it. Why would people need to put pressure on order for Linux to start supporting features long available in file systems it supports? Why would I, specifically, should spend time on it? Does Linux want to become an os for everyone or only for people experimenting with dangerous stuff that make them lose data sometimes?

                Don’t get me wrong, Linux is good even now. But there is no need to actively deny points of possible improvement. When they ask you how great XFS is compared to others you shouldn’t throw “exbibytes” word, you should first think what problems people might have with it, especially if they want to switch from windows.

                If you setup a new install, and say you want encryption, LUKS is what you get.

                And if I want to only encrypt some files? I need to create a volume specifically for that, right? Or I could just use something else.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  1
                  edit-2
                  24 days ago

                  Open source clearly works because of the scale and breath of it’s use. That’s the modern world and its use is only increasing. This a good thing for multiple reasons.

                  Unicode filename length clearly isn’t as big an issue as you feel or it would be fixed. There is some BIG money that could be spent to fix this for countries and companies who need unicode.

                  How you encrypt depends on your aim. If you aim is limit your character available for filenames, there are ways. If it’s read only, you do a GPG tar ball. LUKS if you want a live system. You can just create a file, LUKS format it.

                  Resetup

                  sudo fallocate -l 1G test.img
                  sudo cryptsetup luksFormat --type luks2 test.img
                  sudo cryptsetup luksOpen test.img myplace
                  sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/mapper/myplace
                  sudo mkdir /mnt/myplace
                  sudo mount /dev/mapper/myplace /mnt/myplace
                  

                  close

                  sudo umount /mnt/myplace
                  sudo cryptsetup luksClose myplace
                  

                  reopen

                  sudo cryptsetup luksOpen test.img myplace
                  sudo mount /dev/mapper/myplace /mnt/myplace
                  

                  Basically the same as systemd-homed does for you: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Systemd-homed

                  But there are many ways. A good few filesystems offer folder/file encryption natively. Though I’d argue that’s less secure.

                  • @rdri
                    link
                    English
                    124 days ago

                    clearly isn’t as big an issue as you feel or it would be fixed.

                    I might have agreed with such statements 20 years ago. But not anymore. I can’t count the times I’ve seen how certain software, game, system or a service literally brick themselves when a use case involves using non-ascii, non-english or non-unicode characters, paths or regions. Not Linux related only or specifically, but almost always it looks and feels embarrassing. I’ve seen some related global improvements in windows, NTFS, and some products, but all that is still not enough in my opinion. The thought that people shouldn’t need >255 bytes (or symbols) sounds not different from that 640k ram quote.