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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
Alexander Ames, University of California, Santa Cruz
Carlos Maltzahn, University of California, Santa Cruz
Nikhil Bobb, University of California, Santa Cruz
Ethan L. Miller, University of California, Santa Cruz
Scott A. Brandt, University of California, Santa Cruz
Alisa Neeman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Adam Hiatt, University of California, Santa Cruz
Deepa Tuteja, University of California, Santa Cruz
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
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