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Mail Archives: opendos/1997/04/24/07:30:09

Message-Id: <199704241125.NAA18279@grendel.sylaba.poznan.pl>
Comments: Authenticated sender is <grendel@[150.254.113.14]>
From: "Mark Habersack" <grendel AT hoth DOT amu DOT edu DOT pl>
Organization: PPP (Pesticide Powered Pumpkins)
To: Tim Bird <tbird AT caldera DOT com>
Date: Thu, 24 Apr 1997 13:21:44 +0100
MIME-Version: 1.0
Subject: Re: File system ideas
Reply-to: grendel AT hoth DOT amu DOT edu DOT pl
CC: alaric AT abwillms DOT demon DOT co DOT uk, opendos-developer AT delorie DOT com
In-reply-to: <199704232059.OAA28749@caldera.com>
References: <199704230333 DOT PAA26913 AT cantua DOT canterbury DOT ac DOT nz> from "Mr M S Aitchison" at Apr 23, 97 03:33:52 pm

Once upon a time (on 23 Apr 97 at 14:59) Tim Bird said:

> > (5) Design a totally new file system that requires very little RAM 
> >     yet is efficient (to be very efficient it might want more RAM), and
> >     capable of storing just about any extended attributes, ACL
> >     permissions, etc. If anybody wants to discuss details I have some
> >     ideas (which I'd love to simulate, if anybody has flexible software
> >     for the job).
> 
> I've been toying with attributed file system ideas for a few years now.
> Combining a general attribute system with file system monitors (triggered
> and monitored events) you could do some fairly interesting things.  I'd be
> willing to discuss ideas with you.
Please post your ideas and I'm sure we will come up with something really 
clever. Lately I was looking at the NTFS system which seems to be one of the 
few things Micro$loth designed well. It has two things I consider very 
useful: ACL permissions (as Alaric stated befor) and per-file compression. 
Having such a *free* system would be a great thing. The FS monitoring looks 
like a very powerful feature (yet I still think that it *might* be slow in 
everyday use).
==================================================
Stand straight, look me in the eye and say goodbye
Stand straight, we drifted past the point of
  reasons why.
Yesterday starts tommorow, tommorow starts today
And the problems seem to be we're picking up the
  pieces of a ricochet...

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