Le Fri, 13 Jan 2006 23:17:06 +0200, Toomas Laasik [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
Hello,
Here are some links that I have found while searching such file systems
that can keep versions or log of changes:
While not currently implemented as a filesystem, Subversion repositories
look-and-feel is
Peter van Hardenberg wrote:
On January 13, 2006 03:00 pm, you wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2006, Hans Reiser wrote:
If someone figures out why we can't do it but /proc can, or even fixes
it, it would be good.
It wouldn't be something so simple as echo's trailing newline, would it?
-Jonathan
David Masover wrote:
Peter van Hardenberg wrote:
On January 13, 2006 03:00 pm, you wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2006, Hans Reiser wrote:
If someone figures out why we can't do it but /proc can, or even fixes
it, it would be good.
It wouldn't be something so simple as echo's
Bedros Hanounik wrote:
David,
I appreciate your criticism, but we're not in a flame war. I never
claimed to be an FS expert. Take it easy; you don't have to beat my
suggestion to death. There's no perfect solution, and all feedbacks, no
matter how idiotic or simple may seem, help making a
Peter van Hardenberg wrote:
Hi Yoanis, good to see you're still pursuing this.
On January 11, 2006 02:59 pm, Yoanis Gil Delgado wrote:
This are the intentions:
To write a versioning plugin that will allows the file system user to
easily revert the files under versioning to a some previous
Yoanis Gil Delgado wrote:
On Thursday 12 January 2006 06:56 pm, you wrote:
David,
I appreciate your criticism, but we're not in a flame war. I never
claimed to be an FS expert. Take it easy; you don't have to beat my
suggestion to death. There's no perfect solution, and all feedbacks,
Toomas Laasik wrote:
Hello,
Here are some links that I have found while searching such file
systems that can keep versions or log of changes:
http://logfs.sourceforge.net/ - small logging filesystem project
started by a student, but not very stable yet
http://wayback.sourceforge.net/ -
On Wed, 2006-01-11 at 22:44 -0800, Hans Reiser wrote:
Hans Reiser wrote:
I am skeptical that having it occur with every
write is desirable actually.
Consider the case where you type cat file1 file2. This will produce
a version of file2 for every 4k that is in file1, because (well I
Hi Yoanis, good to see you're still pursuing this.
On January 11, 2006 02:59 pm, Yoanis Gil Delgado wrote:
This are the intentions:
To write a versioning plugin that will allows the file system user to
easily revert the files under versioning to a some previous state. The
plugin will allow
I think versioning plugin is a great idea and I bet there're many people like me waiting for such a plugin. However, I have few questions;what happens when I delete a file? should I loose all history of the file with such action?
if there's an undelete plugin, what kind of hooks needed so
On Thursday 12 January 2006 02:34 pm, you wrote:
On Thursday 12 January 2006 01:44 am, you wrote:
Hans Reiser wrote:
I am skeptical that having it occur with every
write is desirable actually.
Consider the case where you type cat file1 file2. This will produce
a
On Thursday 12 January 2006 03:02 pm, you wrote:
Please remember the plugin it's in an earlier design phase, and the answers
can change, but right now this is what I think:
I think versioning plugin is a great idea and I bet there're many people
like me waiting for such a plugin. However,
On Thursday 12 January 2006 02:39 pm, you wrote:
On Thursday 12 January 2006 01:14 pm, you wrote:
I'm planning to use a delta techniques for versioning storage (delta
compression). The versioning will be at the write level. The versions
will be saved in a special directory under the
On Thu, 2006-01-12 at 15:05 -0500, Yoanis Gil Delgado wrote:
On Thursday 12 January 2006 02:34 pm, you wrote:
On Thursday 12 January 2006 01:44 am, you wrote:
Hans Reiser wrote:
I am skeptical that having it occur with every
write is desirable actually.
Consider
Bedros Hanounik wrote:
I think versioning plugin is a great idea and I bet there're many people
like me waiting for such a plugin. However, I have few questions;
what happens when I delete a file? should I loose all history of the
file with such action?
Depends. Delete has always been a
Peter van Hardenberg wrote:
Hi Yoanis, good to see you're still pursuing this.
On January 11, 2006 02:59 pm, Yoanis Gil Delgado wrote:
I would second Hans' suggestion about a /version/snapshot file which
would essentially act like a cvs commit on that file. I'd suggest that
there be
David,I appreciate your criticism, but we're not in a flame war. I never claimed to be an FS expert. Take it easy; you don't have to beat my suggestion to death. There's no perfect solution, and all feedbacks, no matter how idiotic or simple may seem, help making a better final solution.
my
On Thursday 12 January 2006 06:56 pm, you wrote:
David,
I appreciate your criticism, but we're not in a flame war. I never
claimed to be an FS expert. Take it easy; you don't have to beat my
suggestion to death. There's no perfect solution, and all feedbacks, no
matter how idiotic or
Yoanis Gil Delgado wrote:
This are the intentions:
To write a versioning plugin that will allows the file system user to easily
revert the files under versioning to a some previous state. The plugin will
allow to revert the file state, based on revisions number and date
modifications(and not
Hans Reiser wrote:
:
I am skeptical that having it occur with every
write is desirable actually.
Consider the case where you type cat file1 file2. This will produce
a version of file2 for every 4k that is in file1, because (well I didn't
look at the bash source, but I would guess) it
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