File Systems: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
List of file systems | List of file systems | ||
==Standard File Systems== | ==Standard File Systems== | ||
Line 18: | Line 17: | ||
==Distributed File Systems== | ==Distributed File Systems== | ||
* GlusterFS - joins directories across multiple computers | * GlusterFS - joins filesystem directories across multiple computers | ||
* Ceph - joins drives across multiple computers. Has block, file, and object storage APIs. | * Ceph - joins drives across multiple computers. Has block, file, and object storage APIs. | ||
* SeaweedFS - joins drives across multiple computers. Has file (with filer extension) and object storage APIs. | * SeaweedFS - joins drives across multiple computers. Has file (with filer extension) and object storage APIs. | ||
* JuiceFS - creates a POSIX-compatable file storage using a object storage and metadata database. | * JuiceFS - creates a POSIX-compatable file storage using a object storage and metadata database. | ||
* Rook - deployment of Ceph using Kubernetes | * Rook - deployment of Ceph using Kubernetes |
Revision as of 20:08, 8 February 2024
List of file systems
Standard File Systems
- BTRFS
- ZFS
- EXT4
- XFS
- NTFS
Overlay File Systems
- MergerFS - a union file system to combine multiple folders on a single computer.
Block Overlays
- LUKS - encrypts a partition
- LVM - joins multiple blocks into a pool from which to allocate blocks
- mdraid
Distributed File Systems
- GlusterFS - joins filesystem directories across multiple computers
- Ceph - joins drives across multiple computers. Has block, file, and object storage APIs.
- SeaweedFS - joins drives across multiple computers. Has file (with filer extension) and object storage APIs.
- JuiceFS - creates a POSIX-compatable file storage using a object storage and metadata database.
- Rook - deployment of Ceph using Kubernetes