From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-ID: <3e1162e60711131404l593f4d99i52e50175151c0959@mail.gmail.com> Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 14:04:58 -0800 From: "David Leimbach" To: "Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs" <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Subject: Re: [9fans] Glendix? In-Reply-To: <3a4dacba376b00e27e9c1a6b93c77baa@terzarima.net> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline References: <3a4dacba376b00e27e9c1a6b93c77baa@terzarima.net> Topicbox-Message-UUID: f885ca9a-ead2-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 On Nov 13, 2007 10:02 AM, Charles Forsyth wrote: > >> I wish the BSD people would see how important they are, but then, I > >> feel sorry for the VFS they have to deal with... > >> > >> uriel > > really? i'd supposed the bsd vfs was better designed. isn't it? (i hadn't really looked at it > for a years, so that wasn't rhetorical, i was really asking a question.) > the linux one has lots of things in quite the wrong place > because ... all decent files are on proper storage somewhere or they are damned! > > I was of the impression the Linux VFS layer was set up to work well with NFS. I've no idea how the BSD VFS is these days. Mac OS X had stackable filesystems for a while, then Apple discouraged that practice (presumably due to overheads of doing so... so goodbye original implementation of unionfs). DragonflyBSD was going to have a VFS based on a message passing system of sorts... but not 9p :-). That would make things like FUSE pretty easy I'd think, or 9p for that matter. FreeBSD may still allow stackable filesystems, but it's hard to tell where they are because all the cool kids work on linux. Dave