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  2. Google File System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_File_System

    Google File System (GFS or GoogleFS, not to be confused with the GFS Linux file system) is a proprietary distributed file system developed by Google to provide efficient, reliable access to data using large clusters of commodity hardware. Google file system was replaced by Colossus in 2010.

  3. Sawzall (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawzall_(programming_language)

    Sawzall is a procedural domain-specific programming language, used by Google to process large numbers of individual log records. Sawzall was first described in 2003, [1] and the szl runtime was open-sourced in August 2010. [2]

  4. List of file systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_file_systems

    GmailFS (Google Mail File System) GridFS – GridFS is a specification for storing and retrieving files that exceed the BSON-document size limit of 16 MB for MongoDB. lnfs (long names) LTFS (Linear Tape File System for LTO and Enterprise tape) MVFS – MultiVersion File System, proprietary, used by IBM DevOps Code ClearCase.

  5. Sanjay Ghemawat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanjay_Ghemawat

    Ghemawat's work at Google includes: Original design of Protocol Buffers, an open-source data interchange format. MapReduce, a system for large-scale data processing applications. Google File System, is a proprietary distributed file system developed to provide efficient, reliable access to data using large clusters of commodity hardware.

  6. CloudStore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CloudStore

    There is a FUSE module so that the file system can be mounted on Linux. In September 2007, Kosmix published Kosmosfs as open source. [1] The last commit activity was in 2010. The Google Code page for Kosmosfs now points to the Quantcast File System on GitHub which is the successor to KFS. [2] A former project on SourceForge used the name ...

  7. HAMMER2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAMMER2

    An example of file system layout of HAMMER2. The HAMMER2 file system was conceived by Matthew Dillon, who initially planned to bring it up to minimal working state by July 2012 and ship the final version in 2013. [1] [2] During Google Summer of Code 2013 Daniel Flores implemented compression in HAMMER2 using LZ4 and zlib algorithms.

  8. Fuchsia (operating system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuchsia_(operating_system)

    Fuchsia is an open-source capability-based operating system developed by Google. In contrast to Google's Linux-based operating systems such as ChromeOS and Android, Fuchsia is based on a custom kernel named Zircon. It publicly debuted as a self-hosted git repository in August 2016 without any official corporate announcement.

  9. RozoFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RozoFS

    Rozo provides an open source POSIX filesystem, built on top of distributed file system architecture similar to Google File System, Lustre or Ceph. The Rozo specificity lies in the way data is stored. The Rozo specificity lies in the way data is stored.