> On Friday 15 December 2006 10:01, Nikolai Joukov wrote: > > > Nikolai Joukov wrote: > > > > We have designed a new stackable file system that we called RAIF: > > > > Redundant Array of Independent Filesystems. > > > > > > Great! > > Yes, definitely... > > I see the major benefit being in the mobile, industrial and embedded systems > arena. Perhaps this might come as a suprise to people, but a very large and > ever growing number (perhaps even most) Linux devices don't use block devices > for storage. Instead they use flash file systems or nfs, niether of which use > local block devices. > > It looks like RAIF gives a way to provide redundancy etc on these devices. Good point! Also, RAIF can store different file types differently. Therefore, it is possible to mount RAIF over file systems with lots of storage space and a flash file system (with usually less space). In this case, RAIF can be configured to use flash to keep replicas of the most important data only. And yes, thanks to the stackable nature of RAIF no explicit flash support is required. RAIF can reuse existing file systems designed for flash media (e.g., JFFS2). Nikolai. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html