Distributed file management system

A distributed file management system (DFS) with a plurality of nodes (A,B,C) and a plurality of files. The DFS uses the UNIX operating system tree structure employing inodes (data structures containing the administrative information of each file) to manage the local files and surrogate inodes (s_ino...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors SMITH, TODD ALLEN, SHAHEEN-GOUDA, AMAL AHMED, JOHNSON, DONOVAN WILLIAM
Format Patent
LanguageEnglish
French
German
Published 17.08.1988
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Summary:A distributed file management system (DFS) with a plurality of nodes (A,B,C) and a plurality of files. The DFS uses the UNIX operating system tree structure employing inodes (data structures containing the administrative information of each file) to manage the local files and surrogate inodes (s_inode) to manage access to files existing on another node. In addition, the DFS uses a file access structure lock (fas_lock) to manage multiple requests to a single file. The primary reason for the addition of the fas_lock for each file is to avoid the problem of deadlocks. The inodes and s_inodes use the fas_lock to synchronize their accesses to a file and avoid a deadlock situation where both s_inode and inode await the use of a file that is locked by the other.
Bibliography:Application Number: EP19880101087