Difference between revisions of "File"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Tags: Mobile web edit, Mobile edit |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | [[Linux Kernel]] modes for file I/O: buffered and direct. (See also: [[kswapd]] and [[Jens Axboe]]) | ||
− | [[ | + | |
+ | Operating on files: <code>cp</code>, <code>[[mv]]</code>, <code>[[rm]]</code>, <code>[[touch]]</code> | ||
Revision as of 08:37, 7 May 2020
Linux Kernel modes for file I/O: buffered and direct. (See also: kswapd and Jens Axboe)
Operating on files: cp
, mv
, rm
, touch
Related terms
See also
cat
,tac
,more
,less
,tail
,mtail
,echo
,stdin
,tr
,column
,paste
,truncate
,logrotate
,xzcat
pv
,progress
,sort
,ncat
,virt-cat
,awk
,join
,col
,fold
,tee
,sponge
,nfs-cat
,journalctl, ccat, icat, EOF
, lolcat- file, File system, directory,
touch
,mkdir
,ls
,ln
truncate
,fallocate
,split
,stat
, inode, File descriptor, superblock, block size (blockdev
),fuser
,lsof
,scrub
,chattr
, ulimit (nofiles),cp
,mv
,file (command)
,mkfifo
,chmod
- File systems:
ext4
,XFS
,ZFS
,btrfs
,wipefs
,findfs
,HDFS
,overlay
,aufs
,virt-filesystems
, Windows: (FAT, NTFS, ReFS), GPFS, squashfs, Ecryptfs, Encfs, FUSE, VMFS, Comparison of distributed file systems, Userspace filesystem, Resize filesystem size
Advertising: