FAT file system now licensed by MS ?

From: Fred N. van Kempen <waltje_at_pdp11.nl>
Date: Thu Dec 4 18:30:23 2003

On Fri, 5 Dec 2003, Tony Duell wrote:

> [1] There's an extra field in each directory entry (the RT11 system
> allows for this) which holds the extact number of bits used in the last
> sector of the file.
Bytes, right?

> There is no FAT, or anything like it, in the RT11 structure. Each
> directory entry stores the start block number and length for each file,
> unused space had directory entries too, and they're sorted in ascending
> order of blocks. Files must be contiguous.
So, yeah, if you had a 28-blocks file, and changed the word "foo" to
the word "bar" at byte offset 219 in block 12, then what? Was it
smart enough to just rewrite that block? When extending a file,
did it have to rewrite the entire file to a new location if the
block after the 28th block was already in use?

--f

-- 
Fred N. van Kempen, DEC (Digital Equipment Corporation) Collector/Archivist
Visit the VAXlab Project at                     http://www.pdp11.nl/VAXlab/
Visit the Archives at                                  http://www.pdp11.nl/
Email: waltje_at_pdp11.nl         BUSSUM, THE NETHERLANDS / Sunnyvale, CA, USA
Received on Thu Dec 04 2003 - 18:30:23 GMT

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Oct 10 2014 - 23:35:49 BST