enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Drive mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive_mapping

    Drive mapping is how MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows associate a local drive letter (A-Z) with a shared storage area to another computer (often referred as a File Server) over a network. After a drive has been mapped, a software application on a client's computer can read and write files from the shared storage area by accessing that drive, just ...

  3. Drive letter assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive_letter_assignment

    On the Japanese PC-98, if the system is booted from floppy disk, the dedicated version of MS-DOS assigns letters to all floppy drives before considering hard drives; it does the opposite if it is booted from a hard drive, that is, if the OS was installed on the hard drive, MS-DOS would assign this drive as drive "A:" and a potentially existing ...

  4. Device mapper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_mapper

    The device mapper is a framework provided by the Linux kernel for mapping physical block devices onto higher-level virtual block devices.It forms the foundation of the logical volume manager (LVM), software RAIDs and dm-crypt disk encryption, and offers additional features such as file system snapshots.

  5. Logical Volume Manager (Linux) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_Volume_Manager_(Linux)

    Creates a new, empty device mapping. Maps it (with the "linear" target) onto the data areas of the PVs the logical volume belongs to. To move an online logical volume between PVs on the same Volume Group, use the "pvmove" tool: Creates a new, empty device mapping for the destination. Applies the "mirror" target to the original and destination maps.

  6. Nemo (file manager) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemo_(file_manager)

    Nemo version 1.0.0 was released in July 2012 along with version 1.6 of Cinnamon, [3] [better source needed] reaching version 1.1.2 in November 2012. [4] It started as a fork of the GNOME file manager Nautilus v3.4 [5] [6] [7] [better source needed] after the developers of the operating system Linux Mint considered that "Nautilus 3.6 is a catastrophe".

  7. EFI system partition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EFI_System_partition

    GRUB 2, elilo and systemd-boot serve as conventional, full-fledged standalone UEFI boot managers (a.k.a. bootloader managers) for Linux. Once loaded by a UEFI firmware, they can access and boot kernel images from all devices, partitions and file systems they support, without being limited to the EFI system partition.

  8. GVfs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GVfs

    A cause of confusion is the fact that the file system abstraction used by the Linux kernel is also called the virtual file system (VFS) layer. This is however at a lower level. The GVfs model differs from e.g. GnomeVFS, which it replaces, in that file systems must be mounted

  9. Unix filesystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_filesystem

    The filesystem appears as one rooted tree of directories. [1] Instead of addressing separate volumes such as disk partitions, removable media, and network shares as separate trees (as done in DOS and Windows: each drive has a drive letter that denotes the root of its file system tree), such volumes can be mounted on a directory, causing the volume's file system tree to appear as that directory ...