A very, very long time ago we had an AIX system (4.3 with jfs1) where the users 
logged in interactively.  We would find files with names like:

/C:\some\very \non-posix\path/file

There's a reason they're called lusers.

On 8/22/18, 3:36 PM, "[email protected] on behalf of 
[email protected]" <[email protected] on behalf of 
[email protected]> wrote:

    On Wed, 22 Aug 2018 17:12:24 -0000, "Oesterlin, Robert" said:
    
    > Sometimes, I look at the data that's being stored in my file systems and 
just shake my head:
    >
    > /gpfs/<path removed>/Restricted/EventChangeLogs/deduped/working contains 
17,967,350 files (in ONE directory)
    
    I've got  114,029  files of the form:
    
    
/gpfs/archive/tenant/this/that/F:\the\other\thing\what\where\they\thinking/apparently/not/much.dat
    
    I admit being mystified -  how does such a mess happen? (Note that our 
tenant users are
    only able to access the GPFS filesystem through NFS - which is only 
exported to other Linux
    systems....)
    

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