UFS: Difference between revisions
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Not to be confused with the [[FFS (Amiga)|Amiga FFS]], the BSD FFS / UFS is commonly used on hard disks for the *BSD and derivatives. What is usually called a "partition" is called a "slice" in *BSD, which is in turn subdivided into "partitions" - a naming pattern that leads to some confusion, and to rather cryptic device names (ad0s1c for the third partition on the second slice on the primary master ATAPI hard drive...). |
Not to be confused with the [[FFS (Amiga)|Amiga FFS]], the BSD FFS / UFS is commonly used on hard disks for the *BSD and derivatives. What is usually called a "partition" is called a "slice" in *BSD, which is in turn subdivided into "partitions" - a naming pattern that leads to some confusion, and to rather cryptic device names (ad0s1c for the third partition on the second slice on the primary master ATAPI hard drive...). |
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== See Also == |
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=== External Links === |
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* [https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=ffs&sektion=7 ffs(7)] - FreeBSD Man Page on FFS |
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[[Category:Filesystems]] |
[[Category:Filesystems]] |
Revision as of 22:42, 29 September 2014
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About FFS / UFS (BSD)
Not to be confused with the Amiga FFS, the BSD FFS / UFS is commonly used on hard disks for the *BSD and derivatives. What is usually called a "partition" is called a "slice" in *BSD, which is in turn subdivided into "partitions" - a naming pattern that leads to some confusion, and to rather cryptic device names (ad0s1c for the third partition on the second slice on the primary master ATAPI hard drive...).
See Also
External Links
- ffs(7) - FreeBSD Man Page on FFS