Subject: Re: Aliases:  Are alternate filesystems worth trying?
From: Matthew Keller (kellermg@potsdam.edu)
Date: Sat May 19 2001 - 13:10:36 EDT
    From a programatic design standpoint, Netatalk needs to be
    filesystem dumb for maximum portability. These problem need to be
    overcome internally. Sure, we could have a --with-xfs switch (just
    as an example) which can optimize itself for any given filesystem,
    but there still needs to be internal resolution of this issue.
On 18 May 2001 13:32:19 -0400, Richard Goldman wrote:
> Dear People,
> 
> A question, please, and your knowledge, and even guesses would 
> be much appreciated:
> 
> I know from previous discussion that Macintosh aliases become 
> "unhinged" from the files or directories they are supposed to point 
> to because the alias contains some kind of ID (did?  inode?) that 
> gets recycled by Linux.  Because of this (and the fact that the 
> absolute path of the file isn't stored in the alias), the Mac alias can 
> end up pointing somewhere else entirely.  At least such is my 
> understanding.
> 
> So here's the question:
> 
> Is it Linux itself, at some "virtual" filesystem level, that is re-cycling 
> these ID's, or is it due to the nature and operations of the ext2 
> filesystem?
> 
> Put another way, is the alias problem (re: 1.5pre6 and previous) 
> endemic to Linux, or do you think I'll have better luck if I try another 
> filesystem (managable under Linux) such as ReiserFS or ext3 or 
> ???
> 
> Thank you in advance for your time and thoughts.
> 
> Sincerely,
> Richard
> 
> 
--Matthew Keller Enterprise System Analyst Computing & Technology Services Information Services Division State University of NY at Potsdam Potsdam, NY USA
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