On Oct 5, 2006, at 5:40 PM, Erik Trimble wrote:

And, try thinking of a directory with a few dozen files in it, each with a dozen or more versions. that's hideous, from a normal user standpoint.
VMS's implementation of <filename>;<version> is completely unwieldy if
you have more than a few files,

No it is not. I worked for DEC and used VMS up through 1993 and never found it unwieldy. Even if I had 100 versions of one file. It is

1) what you are used to

2) what you are trained to do

that makes it unwieldy or not

I find the "unix" conventions of storying a file and file~ or any of the other myriad billion ways of doing it that each app has invented to be much more unwieldy.

Yes, you have to "purge" your directories once in a while. The same way you have to clean up any file "mess" you make on you computer (download area, desktop, etc).

or more than a few versions. And, in
modern typical use, it is _highly_ likely both will be true.

So what if you have more than a few versions of a file.

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and just because YOU find it unwieldy does not make it so for the general user or anyone else.

I would LOVE to have a VMS style (sorry, my TOPS-20 usage was very little so I have no remembrance of it there) file versioning built in to the system.

"save early, save often" ONLY makes sense with a file versioning system, or else you lose previous edits if you decide you have gone down a wrong alley.

Chad

---
Chad Leigh -- Shire.Net LLC
Your Web App and Email hosting provider
chad at shire.net



Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature

_______________________________________________
zfs-discuss mailing list
zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org
http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss

Reply via email to