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  2. Hierarchical File System (IBM MVS) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_File_System...

    IBM's Hierarchical File System (HFS) is a POSIX-style hierarchical file system [1] for the MVS/ESA/SP through z/OS operating systems. IBM introduced HFS on February 9, 1993 in MVS/ESA System Product Version 4 Release 3 OpenEdition [ 2 ] [ 3 ] with DFSMS/MVS Version 1 Release 2 [ 4 ] for 3090 mainframes.

  3. List of file systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_file_systems

    HFS – Hierarchical File System in IBM's MVS from MVS/ESA OpenEdition through z/OS V2R4; not to be confused with Apple's HFS. IBM stated that z/OS users should migrate from HFS to zFS, and in z/OS V2R5 dropped support for HFS. HFS – Hierarchical File System, in use until HFS+ was introduced on Mac OS 8.1. Also known as Mac OS Standard format.

  4. MVS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MVS

    It included about 1 million new lines of code, which provide an API shell, utilities, and an extended user interface. Works with a hierarchical file system provided by DFSMS (Data Facility System Managed Storage). The shell and utilities are based on Mortice Kerns' InterOpen products. Independent specialists estimate that it was over 80% open ...

  5. HFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HFS

    Hierarchical file system, a system for organizing directories and files; Hierarchical File System (Apple), a file system introduced in 1985 for the classic Mac OS; Hierarchical File System (IBM MVS), a file system introduced in 1993 for MVS/ESA and subsequent operating systems; Hi Performance FileSystem, a file system used by the HP-UX ...

  6. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Tivoli_Storage_Manager

    Current versions can also recover systems via the files backed up using the TSM B/A Client. There is a major branch of this product. When Tony Johnson left IBM in 1998, he started a company and product named Storix. Storix is feature rich and supports AIX and Linux, has a GUI management interface, and is very similar in origins to Sysback.

  7. Hierarchical file system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_file_system

    In computing, a hierarchical file system is a file system that uses directories to organize files into a tree structure. [ 1 ] In a hierarchical file system, directories contain information about both files and other directories, called subdirectories which, in turn, can point to other subdirectories, and so on. [ 2 ]

  8. Multics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multics

    Multics is the first operating system to provide a hierarchical file system, [10] [11] and file names can be of almost arbitrary length and syntax. A given file or directory can have multiple names (typically a long and short form), and symbolic links between directories are also supported.

  9. Virtual Storage Access Method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_storage_access_method

    Virtual Storage Access Method (VSAM) [1] is an IBM direct-access storage device (DASD) file storage access method, first used in the OS/VS1, OS/VS2 Release 1 (SVS) and Release 2 (MVS) operating systems, later used throughout the Multiple Virtual Storage (MVS) architecture and now in z/OS.