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  2. Transactional NTFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transactional_NTFS

    Transactional NTFS (abbreviated TxF [1]) is a component introduced in Windows Vista and present in later versions of the Microsoft Windows operating system that brings the concept of atomic transactions to the NTFS file system, allowing Windows application developers to write file-output routines that are guaranteed to either succeed completely or to fail completely. [2]

  3. VMware VMFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VMware_VMFS

    VMware VMFS (Virtual Machine File System) is VMware, Inc.'s clustered file system used by the company's flagship server virtualization suite, vSphere. It was developed to store virtual machine disk images, including snapshots. Multiple servers can read/write the same filesystem simultaneously while individual virtual machine files are locked.

  4. Lguest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lguest

    Lguest is a Linux kernel x86 virtualization hypervisor introduced in kernel version 2.6.23 (released 9 October 2007) and removed in kernel version 4.14 (November 2017). [1] The hypervisor is an operating-system-level virtualization system capable of running unmodified 32-bit x86 Linux kernels as guest machines.

  5. VirtualBox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VirtualBox

    A file manager which allows to control the guest file system and copy files from/to it; VMSVGA GPU driver for Linux hosts; Surround speakers setup support; Support for hardware-assisted nested virtualization on AMD CPUs; 6.1 Dec 10, 2019: Support for importing virtual machines from Oracle Cloud

  6. List of file copying software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_file_copying_software

    Gizmo's Freeware published a basic comparison review of a range of well-known third party file copying software on Windows. [1] FastCopy was given top place, being highest speed and also light on system resources (the author states it uses its own cache to avoid slowing other software, and the Win32 API and C runtime rather than MFC ...

  7. File copying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_copying

    In digital file management, copying is a file operation that creates a new file which has the same content as an existing file. Computer operating systems include file copying methods to users; operating systems with graphical user interfaces ( GUIs ) often providing copy-and-paste or drag-and-drop methods of file copying.

  8. Filesystem in Userspace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_in_Userspace

    The program is also used to mount the new file system. At the time the file system is mounted, the handler is registered with the kernel. If a user now issues read/write/stat requests for this newly mounted file system, the kernel forwards these IO-requests to the handler and then sends the handler's response back to the user. Unmounting a FUSE ...

  9. Copy-on-write - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write

    Copy-on-write (COW), also called implicit sharing [1] or shadowing, [2] is a resource-management technique [3] used in programming to manage shared data efficiently. Instead of copying data right away when multiple programs use it, the same data is shared between programs until one tries to modify it.