22nd IEEE / 13th NASA Goddard Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies (MSST'05)
Richer File System Metadata Using Links and Attributes
Monterey, California
April 11-April 14
ISBN: 0-7695-2318-8
Traditional file systems provide a weak and inadequate structure for meaningful representations of file interrelationships and other context-providing metadata. Existing designs, which store additional file-oriented metadata either in a database, on disk, or both are limited by the technologies upon which they depend. Moreover, they do not provide for user-defined relationships among files. To address these issues, we created the Linking File System (LiFS), a file system design in which files may have both arbitrary user- or application-specified attributes, and attributed links between files. In order to assure performance when accessing links and attributes, the system is designed to store metadata in non-volatile memory. This paper discusses several use cases that take advantage of this approach and describes the user-space prototype we developed to test the concepts presented.
Citation:
Alexander Ames, Carlos Maltzahn, Nikhil Bobb, Ethan L. Miller, Scott A. Brandt, Alisa Neeman, Adam Hiatt, Deepa Tuteja, "Richer File System Metadata Using Links and Attributes," msst, pp.49-60, 22nd IEEE / 13th NASA Goddard Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies (MSST'05), 2005