On November 11, 2005 05:59 am, John Gilmore wrote:
> Does anybody remember GoBack? It was a versioning
> system for windows 95/98 that was incredibly flexible and useful. Tracked
> all changes to the whole disk. Old versions of a file? no problem. grab an
> old version of a directory for referance temporarily? easy. Got a virus?
> revert the whole HD, and then grab the newer copies of your documents and
> saved games as needed.

My thoughts on this:

The versioning would be an audit plugin. When the file is modified, tag the 
current version, copy it into a sub-directory (oh, I don't know, say 
file/.revisions/<number/date>), and disable write access to it. You might not 
even need extended filesystem attributes for this, but they would be handy 
for tagging particular versions.

Copy-on-write would make this action extremely cheap, only adding a couple of 
extra writes to make it work.

Given working resource directories, COW, and the ability to set plugins, this 
might be a relatively easy hack to implement. Given an efficient xpath shell, 
you could even create a view of your drive on a particular day. 

If you had a file that was changing often, perhaps you could set an attribute 
on that file which told it only to clone the file every once in a while. 

Come to think of it, a userspace daemon could run in the background and 
replace the need for a plugin, which is probably the better solution. Then 
you just need COW and files which can contain resources.

-pvh

-- 
Peter van Hardenberg ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Victoria, BC, Canada

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