File System

From: Arpan (arpan_de_at_hotmail.com)
Date: 12/02/04


Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2004 08:29:11 +0530

Does the file system being used by the O.S. (i.e. FAT32 or NTFS) play a major role as far as executing ASP.NET applications are concerned? Or in other words, does the NTFS file system enhance the performance of ASP.NET applications?

Thanks,

Arpan



Relevant Pages

  • Re: How safe is a "Limited" XP account?
    ... Another big "it depends" is the file system. ... your limited account can pretty much write any ... Not so on NTFS. ... the applications are another matter ...
    (comp.security.misc)
  • Re: How safe is a "Limited" XP account?
    ... Another big "it depends" is the file system. ... your limited account can pretty much write any ... Not so on NTFS. ... the applications are another matter ...
    (comp.os.ms-windows.nt.admin.security)
  • Re: How safe is a "Limited" XP account?
    ... Another big "it depends" is the file system. ... your limited account can pretty much write any ... Not so on NTFS. ... the applications are another matter ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: File System
    ... but in the real world the tiny performance hit is vastly outweighed by the ... Does the file system being used by the O.S. (i.e. FAT32 or NTFS) play a major role as far as executing ASP.NET applications are concerned? ... does the NTFS file system enhance the performance of ASP.NET applications? ...
    (microsoft.public.dotnet.framework.aspnet)
  • Re: XP Less Secure than 98 for Sharing Files
    ... >folders & shares such that I don't have to bother with individual ... and requires NTFS; ... >> can't formally scan for malware, ... recovery and non-automated file system repair. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.security_admin)