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What is a computer file system?

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A computer file system is a way of organizing binary information (1s and 0s) on your computer hard disk drive or SSD so it can be read. Without a file system, there wouldn’t be a way for the operating system (OS) to know where one data block ends and another begins.  

Almost all computer file systems organize data using a hierarchical tree structure where files and folders (or directories) can be nested inside each other. Imagine paper is placed in a folder, that folder is inserted into a binder, and then the binder is placed on a shelf.  

Note that a file system, like NTFS, is different from a file format, like .jpg or .mp3. The file system used by an OS provides the overall structure and organization of files on the device. A file format determines how the data inside a single file is arranged.  

For example, an image, a document, a song and a movie are fundamentally all collections of bits on your computer. How bits are organized within the file will determine whether you see an image (.jpg) or hear a song (.mp3). 

Examples of computer file systems

Different operating systems tend to have their own file system implementations. These differences make interoperability between different computer OS challenging, although compatibility has increased over time.   

For example, if you want to format your Mac external drive with HFS+, it cannot be read by Windows and your Mac will be able to read a Windows drive formatted with NTFS, but won’t write to it. If you need to move files between different OS, you’ll need to format your external drive in a format that can be read and written to by both. 

Windows file systems

In 1977, Microsoft introduced the File Allocation Table (FAT) file system for their version of stand-alone disk. The FAT file system has received several upgrades over the years: FAT12, FAT16 introduced 16-bit support, and FAT32 brought 32-bit support.  

In 1993, Microsoft released Windows NT with its New Technology File System (NTFS), which saw significant improvements in security and performance over FAT. Although released over 30 years ago, NTFS is still used by the latest versions of Windows 10 and 11. NTFS has seen significant development and updates since its inception. 

Mac file systems

In 1984, Apple released the Macintosh File System (MFS) alongside the original Apple Mac. MFS was a flat file system, meaning there are no subdirectories, and all files are stored in one directory.  

In 1985, Apple released the Hierarchical File System (HFS, which supported nested files and folders for the first time. It was released alongside the first Macintosh hard drive.  

In 1998, HFS Plus was released and included significant upgrades such as support for large files up to 8 exabytes and journaling. To give you an idea of how large 8 exabytes are, it would take one million Crucial 1TB SSDs to fully store it all.  

In 2017, Apple released the Apple File System (APFS) alongside macOS High Sierra. APFS introduced support for cloned files, snapshots, and full-disk encryption. APFS was optimized for SSDs as file metadata is stored alongside the file data, a process which would lead to serious data fragmentation on an HDD. 

Unix and Linux file systems

Unix is the operating system that underpins most of the internet’s servers. The first Unix file system dates to 1969.  

In April 1992, the first file system created specifically for the Linux kernel was the extended file system (ext). This was quickly updated to ext2 in 1993, ext3 in 2001 that added journaling support, and ext4 in 2006 included support for unlimited subdirectories subject to the size of your storage hardware and additional checksum support for journals and metadata.  

In 2001, Sun Microsystems released the Zettabyte File System (ZFS) as part of the Solaris operating system, a proprietary OS by Oracle for Unix.  

In 2007, developer Chris Mason released Btrfs for Linux. Unlike most file systems whose names are acronyms, Btrfs simply means “better filesystem”. Mason designed Btrfs to address proper storage scaling and user readability regarding interfaces. 

How do file systems work?

When the OS first saves a file to a drive, the file contents are broken down into blocks or clusters that represent the smallest unit of storage the file system can manage. For example, if your file is 25KB and your block size is 16KB, the file system will allocate two 16KB blocks to store it; the extra 7KB of left over space will then be wasted. Smaller block sizes mean space can be allocated more efficiently, but larger block sizes mean it can be read and written more efficiently; there’s always a tradeoff between the two. It’s very common nowadays to work with files much larger than 16KB, so the wasted space is minimal.  

Depending on available space, the data might be stored in one chunk (contiguous allocation) or allocated in a way that tracks how the data is stored in different parts of the drive. This was a common cause of fragmentation on spinning HDDs, an event where file systems store files non-continuously and therefore decrease performance with increased seek time.  

The file system also maintains a directory structure, so it knows exactly where all parts of a file are located on your drive. A File Allocation Table (FAT) or similar file system acts like an index and stores the addresses of all the data making up the file.  

File systems also store important metadata. Metadata is data about data, including information like the file owner, creation date, file size, and file type.   

Modern file systems also include a feature called Journaling, a technique that protects against data loss. The file system records a plan of what is going to happen (e.g. moving a file), performs the task, and then logs the change. If something happens before the operation is complete, the file system can refer to the journal, roll back to before the error, or repeat the operation. An event like power loss or system failure during a file transfer could make the file unreadable without journaling.  

File systems often include checksums, small data blocks used to maintain data integrity. All files are stored as 1s and 0s, so checking the sum of these numbers and monitoring changes means corrupt files can be identified and repaired automatically.   

In summary, a file system is responsible for allocating and organizing data on your disk, tracking its location, status and integrity, and then ensuring data can be stored and accessed efficiently. 

File system glossary

  • File system: A method for organizing and storing data on a storage device such as an HDD or SSD. The file system defines how files are named, stored, retrieved, and structured 
  • File format: The internal structure or encoding of data within a file. Examples include .jpg, .mp3, and .docx. Unlike a filesystem, which governs overall file organization, a file format determines how bits are interpreted inside a file 
  • Hierarchical tree structure: A common file system layout where files are organized in directories (folders), and those directories can contain other files or subdirectories to create a tree-like structure of data 
  • Flat file structure: A flat structure file system organizes all files in a single directory with no hierarchy or ability for nested folders. Every file exists at the same level with no way to group related files into subdirectories 
  • Blocks (or clusters): The smallest unit of storage the file system can manage. A 16KB block means the system allocates data in chunks of 16KB. If your file is only 4KB, it will still occupy 16KB of space and leave the remaining 12KB unusable 
  • Metadata: In a file system, metadata refers to information about files such as creation date, last modified date, file format, file size, permissions, and ownership 
  • Journaling: A feature that keeps a log (journal) of changes before they’re committed to the main filesystem. Journaling helps protect against data corruption in the event of a crash or power failure. Found in systems like HFS+, ext3, ext4, and NTFS 
  • Cloned files: A feature introduced in APFS that allows multiple copies of a file to be made without duplicating the actual data to reduce storage use while maintaining independent file pointers 
  • Snapshots: A point-in-time, read-only version of the file system. Snapshots enable backup and recovery by preserving a copy of the system as it existed at a specific moment. Supported in APFS, ZFS, and Btrfs 
  • Full-disk encryption: A security feature that encrypts the entire contents of a disk to protect it from unauthorized access. APFS supports this natively 
  • Data fragmentation: Occurs when file data is stored in non-contiguous blocks across a disk, which can reduce performance on spinning hard drives by increasing seek time. SSDs are less affected due to random access speeds. APFS was optimized to minimize fragmentation on SSDs 
Name
Year of Release
Manufacturer
Original OS
Hardware Target
Filename Limits
Structure
Notes

CP/M

1974

Digital Research

CP/M

Floppy disks

8.3

Flat

Early OS file system; limited functionality

FAT

1977

Microsoft

MS-DOS

Floppy disks

8.3 (8 characters + 3 ext.)

Flat

Original File Allocation Table; very simple, no support for hierarchy

FAT12

1980

Microsoft

MS-DOS 2.0

Floppy disks

8.3

Hierarchical

First to support subdirectories; used primarily on floppies

FAT16

1984

Microsoft

MS-DOS 3.x

Hard disks (≤2GB)

8.3

Hierarchical

Larger partition support than FAT12

MFS

1984

Apple

System 1

400K floppy disk

255 (limited by UI)

Flat

No directory structure; precursor to HFS

HFS

1985

Apple

Mac System 2.1

Macintosh + hard disk

31 characters

Hierarchical

Replaced MFS; added folder support

OS/2 HPFS

1989

IBM / Microsoft

OS/2

PC hard drives

255

Hierarchical

Replaced FAT in OS/2; supports long filenames and metadata

ext

1992

Rémy Card (Linux)

Linux Kernel

General purpose

255

Hierarchical

First filesystem for Linux; quickly replaced by ext2

NTFS

1993

Microsoft

Windows NT

Hard disks

255

Hierarchical

Includes journaling, security ACLs, compression, encryption

ext2

1993

Linux community

Linux

General purpose

255

Hierarchical

Faster, removed journaling; widely used before ext3

FAT32

1996

Microsoft

Windows 95 OSR2

Hard disks, flash media

255 (with VFAT extensions)

Hierarchical

Supports partitions up to 2TB; lacks journaling

HFS+

1998

Apple

Mac OS 8.1

Hard disks, SSDs

255 (Unicode)

Hierarchical

Journaling added in later macOS versions

ext3

2001

Linux community

Linux

General purpose

255

Hierarchical

ext2 + journaling

ZFS

2001

Sun Microsystems

Solaris

Enterprise storage

255

Hierarchical

Copy-on-write, snapshots, data checksum

ext4

2006

Linux community

Linux

General purpose

255

Hierarchical

Supports extents, huge file/volume sizes, and more metadata integrity

exFAT

2006

Microsoft

Windows CE, Windows XP Embedded

Flash storage, SD cards, USB drives

255 (Unicode)

Hierarchical

Designed for portable storage; no journaling; cross-platform (Windows/macOS/Linux) support

Btrfs

2007

Oracle

Linux

General purpose

255

Hierarchical

ZFS-like features: snapshots, compression, checksums

APFS

2017

Apple

macOS High Sierra 10.13

SSDs

255 (Unicode)

Hierarchical

Snapshots, cloning, encryption; optimized for flash storage

Conclusion

Computer file systems are highly complicated software that is essential to managing all your data and files on a computer. Developments in security and data integrity mean your data is safer than ever. Speed and size optimizations mean you can store larger files and access them faster, if you have an SSD up to par of course.   

Check out the Crucial System Scanner to guarantee your new SSD will be compatible with your hardware or use the Upgrade Selector to browse all options available for your device. 

FAQs

  • What is the difference between a file system and file format?

    A file system is the structure your computer uses to organize and store files on a storage device. The file system determines how data is physically stored in blocks, how files and directories are named, and how metadata is tracked. 

    A file format, like .jpg or .mp3, defines how the data inside an individual file is arranged so an operating system can interpret it. For example, both an image and a song file are both sequences of binary data, but the file format directs the computer whether to show an image or play audio. 

  • Why can’t my Mac or Windows computer read an external drive I formatted?

    Different OS use different file systems by default. For example: 

    • A drive formatted with Mac HFS+ or APFS systems can’t be read by Windows without third-party software 
    • A drive formatted with Windows NTFS system can be read by a Mac, but not written without third-party software 


    A more universally compatible file system, like exFAT, ensures both systems can read and write to the same external drive. 

  • What is journaling within a file system?

    Journaling is a feature that attempts to prevent data corruption. It works by recording intended changes in a log (or journal) before applying them to the main file system. The journal helps recover the data to a safe state if your computer crashes or loses power during a transfer. 

    File systems, like NTFS, HFS+, and ext3/ext4, with journaling capabilities are more resilient on laptops and other devices prone to sudden shutdowns. 

  • Which file systems should I use for Windows and Mac?

    For Windows: Use NTFS, the default and most efficient file system for Windows, supporting large files, file permissions, encryption, and journaling. 

    For Mac: Use APFS for SSDs and newer macOS versions. HFS+ may still be used for older Macs or mechanical drives. 

    For drives shared between Windows and Mac: Use ExFAT since it’s compatible with both operating systems. exFAT supports large files and doesn’t have the limitations of FAT32. It’s ideal for USB drives and external hard drives that need to work on both platforms.   

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