OS/2 extended attributes
Allen Reese
allen at driversoft.com
Tue Feb 23 18:00:37 GMT 1999
There is a way that you could store attributes regardless of underlying
filesystem. granted it would be a long task, but once you did it you
caould store BeOS attributes, OS/2 Attributes or any other OS'es
attributes.
basically you take advantage of the fact the data is stored in the file,
and the attributes aren't.
then you have a database with all of the files for a dir in it, and in
that you store all the attributes. or you do like Apple does, they store
a .AppleDpuble directory, and store resource forks in there.
Either way that is a very little on how to do such a thing.
The other part is you would have to write your own client to talk to the
server and store/retrieve these attributes. ;)
Allen Reese
Senior Software Engineer
Driversoft, Inc.
allen at driversoft.com
On Wed, 24 Feb 1999, Christopher R. Hertel wrote:
> Markus,
>
> Novell owns the filesystem space on the server and can add features
> whenever they want. Samba runs on a wide variety of Unix platforms (and
> other platforms too). If I understand correctly (which would be unusual),
> the OS/2 extended attributes are stored in the OS/2 filesystem. In this
> regard, Samba is at the mercy of the local filesystem. If there is
> nowhere to store these attributes, then we can't store them.
>
> I'm sure someone else on the list will correct me if I'm off the mark on
> this. I do know that there are filesystems developed or being developed
> for various Unix platforms which do have space for things like ACLs. I
> believe that there is some work being done to allow Samba to make use of
> those features, if they are available.
>
> Chris -)-----
>
> > Hi.
> >
> > Does anybody know if there are plans to store extended attributes
> > on with smb. Since Novell has managed to do so it should be
> > doable with samba.
> >
> > I'd be interested in implementing eas if someone could give a
> > clue where to start with.
> >
> > Markus
> >
>
>
> --
> Christopher R. Hertel -)----- University of Minnesota
> crh at nts.umn.edu Networking and Telecommunications Services
>
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