In
<CAAJSdjhdFqcpkSUKJ9Uu+DSJh1VwwJdFT2VSHwC3P9=79nc...@mail.gmail.com>,
on 06/10/2013
   at 11:45 AM, John McKown <[email protected]> said:

>LUW works similar to z/OS UNIX file systems. I.e. there is a "file
>system" which is formatted using some utility (mkfs in the Linux/UNIX
>world, format in Windows). This sets up all the internals. In today's
>LUW, it is usually possible for a single file to be as big as the
>file system upon which it resides. But no bigger. There is nothing
>like a "multi file system" file (which would vaguely like a
>multivolume data set).

I don't know about windoze, but don't LVM and EVMS allow file systems
to span devices?

-- 
     Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz, SysProg and JOAT
     Atid/2        <http://patriot.net/~shmuel>
We don't care. We don't have to care, we're Congress.
(S877: The Shut up and Eat Your spam act of 2003)

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