The question doesn't warrant a yes or no answer - it depends on the context and how you use it.
See here; https://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Features/Filesystems-Benchmarked
More specifically, BTRFS does more work / has more features than many other filesystems, hence you would expect it to be slow(er) under some workloads.
The question doesn't warrant a yes or no answer - it depends on the context and how you use it.See here; https://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Features/Filesystems-Benchmarked
More specifically, BTRFS does more work / has more features than many other filesystems, hence you would expect it to be slow(er) under some workloads.
See here; https://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Features/Filesystems-Benchmarked
More specifically, BTRFS does more work / has more features than many other filesystems, hence you would expect it to be slow(er) under some workloads.