File System
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A File System is a persistent storage system methodically developed to manage file management tasks of digital files.
- Context:
- It can (typically) manage both content and the metadata of digital files efficiently.
- It can (often) be a component of an Operating System.
- It can (often) provide the structure to control how data is stored and retrieved.
- It can operate on various Storage Devices using different media, including hard disk drive, SSDs, and optical disks.
- …
- Example(s):
- A Linux File System, used by the Linux operating system.
- A Hadoop File System, designed to handle large data sets in a distributed computing environment.
- An ISO 9660 File System, primarily used for optical disks.
- A Universal Disk Format (UDF), used for storing data on DVD media.
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- A Git Repository.
- A Computer Process Management System, which organizes processes, not files.
- A Database System, which manages databases, not file systems.
- See: File Browser, Persistent Storage, File I/O Library.
References
2010
- (Milosavljevic et al., 2010) ⇒ Branko Milosavljevic, Danijela Boberic, Dušan Surla, (2010) "Retrieval of Bibliographic Records Using Apache Lucene". The Electronic Library, 28(4). doi:10.1108/02640471011065355
- QUOTE:... A Lucene document may contain multiple fields with the same name and/or the same content. A Lucene index is a set of documents stored in a persistent storage (a file system, a database, etc.) supported by data structures providing for efficient retrieval. …