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NetWare File System

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nwdeveloper (talk | contribs) at 04:10, 30 April 2015 (Changed the line Maximum extended attributes. Changed 16 to 512. This is the correct value for NetWare 4.11 thru NetWare 6.5 SP8). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

NWFS
Developer(s)Novell
Full nameNetWare File System
Partition IDs0x64 (NWFS 286),
0x65 (NWFS 386),
0x66 (NWFS 386)
Limits
Max volume size1 TiB
Max file size4 GiB
Features
Transparent
compression
Yes
Other
Supported
operating systems
Novell NetWare

In computing, a NetWare File System (NWFS) is a file system based on a heavily modified version of FAT. It was used in the Novell NetWare operating system. It is the default and only file system for all volumes in versions 2.x through 4.x, and the default and only file system for the SYS volume continuing through version 5.x. Novell developed two varieties of NWFS:

  1. 16-bit NWFS 286, used in NetWare 2.x
  2. 32-bit NWFS 386, used in NetWare 3.x through NetWare 6.x.

Novell Storage Services (NSS, released in 1998), superseded the NWFS format.

The NWFS on-disk format was never publicly documented by Novell. The published specifications[citation needed] for 32-bit NWFS are:

  • Maximum file size: 4 GiB
  • Maximum volume size: 1 TiB
  • Maximum files per volume: 2 million when using a single name space.
  • Maximum files per server: 16 million
  • Maximum directory entries: 16 million
  • Maximum volumes per server: 64
  • Maximum volumes per partition: 8
  • Maximum open files per server: 100,000
  • Maximum directory tree depth: 100 levels
  • Characters used: ASCII double-byte
  • Maximum extended attributes: 512
  • Maximum data streams: 10
  • Support for different name spaces: Microsoft Windows Long names (aka OS/2 namespace), Unix, Apple Macintosh
  • Support for restoring deleted files (salvage)
  • Support for journaling (Novell Transaction Tracking System aka TTS)
  • Support for block suballocation, starting in NetWare 4.x

For larger files the file system utilized a performance feature named Turbo FAT.[citation needed]

Transparent file compression was also supported, although this had a significant impact on the performance of file serving.

Every name space requires its own separate directory entry for each file. While the maximum number of directory entries is 16,000,000, two resident name spaces would reduce the usable maximum number of directory entries to 8,000,000, and three to 5,333,333.

16-bit NWFS could handle volumes of up to 256 MiB. However, its only name-space support was a dedicated API to handle Macintosh clients.

See also