This is a brief overview of the Linux filesystem type and /etc/fstab
file. Linux supports a veritable plethora of filesystem types, though the
most common, and the default one at the lab is the ext2 which supports
longer filenames and larger inodes, among other things. Here's a brief
list of the other filesystems that are supported under Linux:
EXT old, rarely used
MSDOS
HPFS OS/2 type
NTFS New NT filesystem, just barely supported at this time.
AIX
Fat32
VFat Win95/98 Filesystem
Minix
BSD
ISO9660 CDROM's
NFS
SWAP
The /etc/fstab file is the standard SysV style fstab. Here's an example:
Where the 1st entry is the device; the 2nd is the mount point;
the 3rd is the type; the 4th is the options; the 5th is the field used
by dump to determine which filesystems need to be backed up; and the 6th
is used by fsck to determine which filesystems need to be checked at boot
time.