Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The AtheOS file system (AFS) was originally used in the AtheOS operating system, and is now a part of the Syllable operating system. AFS started with exactly the same data structures as the Be File System, BFS, and extended its feature set in many ways. As such, AFS is a 64-bit jou ...Full description
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The AtheOS file system (AFS) was originally used in the AtheOS operating system, and is now a part of the Syllable operating system. AFS started with exactly the same data structures as the Be File System, BFS, and extended its feature set in many ways. As such, AFS is a 64-bit journaled file system with support for file attributes. File indexing and soft deletions are also partially supported. A few definitions: Journaled -- All file system transactions are first written to a journal before they are executed. When mounted, the file system replays everything in the journal. So, if something catastrophic occurs as data is being written to the file system, the file system can recover.