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The Andrew File System heavily influenced Version 4 of Sun Microsystems' popular Network File System (NFS). Additionally, a variant of AFS, the DCE Distributed File System (DFS) was adopted by the Open Software Foundation in 1989 as part of their Distributed Computing Environment. Finally AFS (version two) was the predecessor of the Coda file ...
Communication with this OS is done mainly via Winbox, which provides a graphical user interface with the RouterOS installed on the network router. Winbox facilitates device configuration and monitoring. RouterOS also allows for access via FTP, Telnet, serial console, API, mobile application, SSH, and even direct to MAC address (through WinBox).
This class of status code indicates the client must take additional action to complete the request. Many of these status codes are used in URL redirection. [2]A user agent may carry out the additional action with no user interaction only if the method used in the second request is GET or HEAD.
Andrew File System, a distributed networked file system . OpenAFS, an open source implementation of the Andrew File System; Apple File Service, implementing the Apple Filing Protocol
Requested action not taken. File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access). 551: Requested action aborted. Page type unknown. 552: Requested file action aborted. Exceeded storage allocation (for current directory or dataset). 553: Requested action not taken. File name not allowed. 600 Series: Replies regarding confidentiality and integrity: 631
Transarc commercialized the Andrew File System (AFS), now OpenAFS, which was originally developed at Carnegie Mellon. As a member of the Open Software Foundation (later The Open Group ), Transarc developed the DFS distributed filesystem component of the Distributed Computing Environment (DCE) that was sold by Open Group members.
At LinuxWorld on 15 August 2000, IBM announced [1] their plans to release a version of their commercial AFS product under the IBM Public License. This became OpenAFS. This became OpenAFS. Today, OpenAFS is actively developed for a wide range of operating system families including: AIX , Mac OS X , Darwin , HP-UX , Irix , Solaris , Linux ...