diff --git a/paper/paper.ms b/paper/paper.ms index c8e3ca0..e35ff33 100644 --- a/paper/paper.ms +++ b/paper/paper.ms @@ -1141,7 +1141,7 @@ All storage devices have their own particularities, but regular hard drives and .FOOTNOTE2 The rest of this section will address more .dq generic -filesystems\*[*]. +filesystems\*[*] unless explicitely stated otherwise. .FOOTNOTE1 Furthermore, the rich history behind filesystems is inherently related to the rich history of storage devices, this document is not supposed to be a survey on either of those. Let's keep it short and simple. @@ -1348,6 +1348,16 @@ Finally, .B tmpfs is the more flexible one, it is used as ramfs but can be resized and only uses a necessary amount of RAM at a given point (memory is free'd once a file is removed). .FOOTNOTE2 + +.KS +.B "Semantic (tag-based) filesystems" . +Some filesystems (such as tagsistant) store data based on tags for each file which enables to index a file based on many attributes and not a single path. +As a side effect, searching for a file in this context can be done by computing the intersection of different tags\*[*]. +.KE +.FOOTNOTE1 +Well well well… doesn't that sound like the DODB tag triggers? +As if databases and filesystems were intertwined somehow… +.FOOTNOTE2 . .KS .SSS "Conclusion on filesystems"