Auke Kok 2884a92408 Avoid using bash special device nodes.
Bash has special handling when these standard IO files, but
there are cases where customers have special restrictions set
on them. Likely to avoid leaking error data out of system logs
as part of IDS software.

In any case, we can just reopen existing file descriptors here
in both these cases to avoid this entirely. This will always
work.

Signed-off-by: Auke Kok <auke.kok@versity.com>
2025-12-04 13:24:48 -05:00
2020-12-07 09:47:12 -08:00
2020-12-07 10:39:20 -08:00
2021-11-05 11:16:57 -07:00
2025-11-17 14:42:14 -08:00

Introduction

scoutfs is a clustered in-kernel Linux filesystem designed to support large archival systems. It features additional interfaces and metadata so that archive agents can perform their maintenance workflows without walking all the files in the namespace. Its cluster support lets deployments add nodes to satisfy archival tier bandwidth targets.

The design goal is to reach file populations in the trillions, with the archival bandwidth to match, while remaining operational and responsive.

Highlights of the design and implementation include:

  • Fully consistent POSIX semantics between nodes
  • Atomic transactions to maintain consistent persistent structures
  • Integrated archival metadata replaces syncing to external databases
  • Dynamic seperation of resources lets nodes write in parallel
  • 64bit throughout; no limits on file or directory sizes or counts
  • Open GPLv2 implementation

Community Mailing List

Please join us on the open scoutfs-devel@scoutfs.org mailing list hosted on Google Groups

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