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  2. ExpanDrive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ExpanDrive

    ExpanDrive is a network filesystem client for MacOS, Microsoft Windows and Linux that facilitates mapping of local volume to many different types of cloud storage.When a server is mounted with ExpanDrive any program can read, write, and manage remote files (that is, files that only exist on the server) as if they were stored locally. [1]

  3. NDISwrapper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NDISwrapper

    NDISwrapper is a free software driver wrapper that enables the use of Windows XP network device drivers (for devices such as PCI cards, USB modems, and routers) on Linux operating systems. NDISwrapper works by implementing the Windows kernel and NDIS APIs and dynamically linking Windows network drivers to this implementation.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Virtual file system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_file_system

    A VFS can, for example, be used to access local and network storage devices transparently without the client application noticing the difference. It can be used to bridge the differences in Windows , classic Mac OS / macOS and Unix filesystems, so that applications can access files on local file systems of those types without having to know ...

  6. SSHFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSHFS

    SFTP provides secure file transfer from a remote file system. While SFTP clients can transfer files and directories, they cannot mount the server's file system into the local directory tree. Using SSHFS, a remote file system may be treated in the same way as other volumes (such as hard drives or removable media). [6]

  7. Network block device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_block_device

    On Linux, network block device (NBD) is a network protocol that can be used to forward a block device (typically a hard disk or partition) from one machine to a second machine. As an example, a local machine can access a hard disk drive that is attached to another computer. The protocol was originally developed for Linux 2.1.55 and released in ...

  8. NTFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS

    AES (Windows XP Service Pack 1, Windows Server 2003 onward) Data deduplication: Yes (Windows Server 2012) [10] Other; Supported operating systems: Windows NT 3.1 and later Mac OS X 10.3 and later (read-only) Linux kernel version 2.6 and later Linux kernel versions 2.2-2.4 (read-only) FreeBSD NetBSD OpenBSD (read-only) ChromeOS Solaris ReactOS ...

  9. Cyberduck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberduck

    Cyberduck is an open-source client for FTP and SFTP, WebDAV, and cloud storage (OpenStack Swift, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2 and Microsoft Azure), available for macOS and Windows (as of version 4.0) licensed under the GPL. Cyberduck is written in Java and C# using the Cocoa user interface framework on macOS and Windows Forms on Windows.