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  2. ZFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZFS

    ZFS (previously Zettabyte File System) is a file system with volume management capabilities. It began as part of the Sun Microsystems Solaris operating system in 2001. Large parts of Solaris, including ZFS, were published under an open source license as OpenSolaris for around 5 years from 2005 before being placed under a closed source license when Oracle Corporation acquired Sun in 2009–2010.

  3. OpenZFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenZFS

    2012: Feature flags were introduced to replace legacy on-disk version numbers, enabling easier development of the ZFS on-disk format to support new features. 2013: Coexisting with the stable version of MacZFS, its prototype generation (known as OpenZFS on OS X or O3X) uses ZFS on Linux as the new upstream codebase. [11] [12]

  4. Oracle ZFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_ZFS

    Oracle ZFS is Oracle's proprietary implementation of the ZFS file system and logical volume manager for Oracle Solaris. ZFS is a registered trademark belonging to Oracle. ZFS is a registered trademark belonging to Oracle.

  5. Stratis (configuration daemon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratis_(configuration_daemon)

    Stratis configuration daemon was originally developed by Red Hat to have feature parity with ZFS and Btrfs. The hope was due to Stratis configuration daemon being in userland, it would more quickly reach maturity versus the years of kernel level development of file systems ZFS and Btrfs.

  6. List of file systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_file_systems

    BeeGFS is a hardware-independent parallel file system that features distributed metadata and striping of files across multiple targets, such as NVMe devices or logical volumes. Lustre is an open-source high-performance distributed parallel file system for Linux, used on many of the largest computers in the world.

  7. Comparison of file systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_file_systems

    Toggle Features subsection. 3.1 File capabilities. 3.2 Block capabilities. 3.3 Resize capabilities. 3.4 Allocation and layout policies. 4 OS support. 5 Limits ...

  8. zFS (z/OS file system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZFS_(z/OS_file_system)

    zFS technology was first released in 1995 as the Local File System, a lower layer of the DCE Distributed File System. It was available on MVS/ESA V5R2.2 and all OS/390 releases. DFS/LFS was provided as a part of the DCE feature, not part of the base operating system.

  9. ZFS+ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZFS+

    ZFS+ is a combined file system and logical volume manager software subsystem initially released under the Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL). It is based on ZFS, originally developed by Sun Microsystems, with proprietary data deduplication features added by GreenBytes and subsequently made proprietary for a storage system product. [1]