-<a name="notes">
-<h2>Notes on Specific Drivers</h2>
-</a>
-
-<p>I've tested several of the drivers described on this page on a handful
-of systems. The Pfisterer ext2fs driver (from any source) works on both
-ext2fs and ext3fs, but not on ext4fs—but Agner's derivative ext4fs
-driver handles ext4fs, so that's not a problem. The ReiserFS driver is
-obviously useful only on ReiserFS partitions. (Reiser4 is not supported, as
-far as I know.) The Btrfs driver is the newest of the Linux filesystem
-drivers included with rEFInd, and so I've tested it the least, but it's
-worked for me on several test systems. Given that ext2fs, ext3fs, and
-ReiserFS are getting a bit on in age by Linux standards, you might do well
-to use them on a separate Linux <tt>/boot</tt> partition; however, if
-you're willing to use ext3fs, ext4fs, Btrfs, or ReiserFS on your root
-(<tt>/</tt>) filesystem, you can use the EFI drivers to read your kernel
-from it. Note that this assumes you use conventional partitions; to the
-best of my knowledge, there's no EFI driver for Linux's Logical Volume
-Manager (LVM) or Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID)
-configurations, so the EFI can't access filesystems stored in these
-ways.</p>
-
-<p>As noted earlier, rEFInd's drivers prior to version 0.7.0, as well as related drivers from rEFIt, Clover, and VirtualBox, suffer from speed problems. These problems are mostly minor, adding a second or two to boot times; but on some computers, the speed problems can be dramatic, boosting kernel-load times up to as much as three minutes (under VirtualBox). If you run into excessive boot times with such a driver, try switching to the latest rEFInd driver instead. You might also try Pete Batard's efifs drivers.</p>
-
-<p>Although ext2fs, ext3fs, ext4fs, and ReiserFS are all case-sensitive, these drivers treat them in a case-insensitive way. Symbolic links work; however, rEFInd 0.6.11 and later ignore symbolic links, since many distributions use them in a way that creates redundant or non-functional entries in the rEFInd menu. You should be able to use hard links if you want to use a single kernel file in multiple ways (say for two distributions).</p>
-