Kernel Traffic
Latest�|�Archives�|�People�|�Topics
Wine
Latest�|�Archives�|�People�|�Topics
GNUe
Latest�|�Archives�|�People�|�Topics
Czech
Home | News | RSS Feeds | Mailing Lists | Authors Info | Mirrors | Stalled Traffic

FS: FAT

Main Topics Index

Issue #323, Section #5 (3�Sep�2005:�Speeding Up Directory Reads For Large FAT Filesystems)
Issue #293, Section #12 (9�Jan�2005:�Getting/Setting FAT Filesystem Attribute Bits)
Issue #293, Section #13 (9�Jan�2005:�More On FAT Attributes)
Issue #266, Section #4 (1�Jul�2004:�Status Of JFFS2)
Issue #265, Section #1 (30�Jun�2004:�Some Explanation Of Disk Geometry Handling In 2.4 And 2.6)
Issue #263, Section #20 (14�Jun�2004:�Linux 2.6.6 Released)
Issue #260, Section #6 (5�Jun�2004:�Linux VFS Timestamp Resolution Causing User Problems In 2.6)
Issue #252, Section #2 (12�Feb�2004:�Ongoing FAT Filesystem Support)
Issue #251, Section #29 (9�Feb�2004:�Linux 2.4.25-pre7 Released; Status Of 2.4 Deep Freeze)
Issue #245, Section #7 (14�Dec�2003:�Patents Affecting FAT Support)
Issue #234, Section #9 (6�Oct�2003:�Dealing With Partition Table Problems)
Issue #227, Section #6 (11�Aug�2003:�Real-World FAT Improvement Preferred Over Abstract Elegance)
Issue #224, Section #4 (30�Jul�2003:�Expected Changes From 2.4 To 2.6)
Issue #223, Section #7 (20�Jul�2003:�FAT Filesystem Maintainership)
Issue #217, Section #13 (23�May�2003:�kconfig Enhancements)
Issue #212, Section #10 (6�Apr�2003:�Gujin bootloader 0.7 Announced)
Issue #179, Section #7 (11�Aug�2002:�2.5 IDE: The Saga Continues)
Issue #172, Section #5 (23�Jun�2002:�Status Of FAT CVF)
Issue #162, Section #1 (14�Apr�2002:�NTFS 2.0.1 For Kernel 2.5.7)
Issue #131, Section #7 (3�Sep�2001:�2.4.9 And A Vacation)
Issue #104, Section #11 (26�Jan�2001:�2.4 Series Changelogs)
Issue #102, Section #9 (12�Jan�2001:�ac Patches Against 2.4.0-prerelease)
Issue #98, Section #12 (18�Dec�2000:�FATFS Not Yet Ready In Developer Series)
Issue #81, Section #15 (21�Aug�2000:�2.4.0-test7-pre3 And ChangeLogs)
Issue #79, Section #9 (7�Aug�2000:�Status Of 2.4 To Do List; Kernel Bug Tracking System)
Issue #74, Section #1 (3�Jul�2000:�Latest List Of Things To Do Before 2.4 Can Come Out)
Issue #73, Section #13 (26�Jun�2000:�Alan's Latest List Of Things To Do Before 2.4 Can Come Out)
Issue #70, Section #2 (5�Jun�2000:�Things To Do Before 2.4: Saga Continues)
Issue #66, Section #5 (8�May�2000:�To Do Before 2.4: Saga Continues)
Issue #64, Section #10 (24�Apr�2000:�Things To Do Before 2.4: Saga Continues)
Issue #63, Section #5 (17�Apr�2000:�Mounting Audio CDs; The Open Source Development Process)
Issue #63, Section #6 (17�Apr�2000:�2.4 Jobs List: Saga Continues)
Issue #62, Section #8 (10�Apr�2000:�Things To Do Before 2.4: Saga Continues)
Issue #62, Section #12 (10�Apr�2000:�AFFS Support And Discussion)
Issue #57, Section #8 (6�Mar�2000:�fdisk Partition Ordering For Windows 2000)
Issue #46, Section #6 (13�Dec�1999:�Dangerous Fixes To FAT And HPFS)
Issue #45, Section #2 (6�Dec�1999:�Read/Write Semaphores)
Issue #33, Section #14 (7�Sep�1999:�Rebuilding Partition Tables)
Issue #30, Section #1 (5�Aug�1999:�FAT Inherently Broken; COMA Workaround Removed)
Issue #28, Section #8 (22�Jul�1999:�FAT Still Broken In Development Kernels)
Issue #28, Section #10 (22�Jul�1999:�Zip Driver Broken In 2.3.10, Patch Against 2.3.10-pre3)
Issue #28, Section #13 (22�Jul�1999:�Removing Linux/DOS Translations From Kernel)
Issue #27, Section #1 (15�Jul�1999:�Treating Directories As Files)
Issue #26, Section #9 (8�Jul�1999:�Filesystem Reorganization In Development Series)
Issue #25, Section #5 (1�Jul�1999:�Treating Multiple Files As One)
Issue #25, Section #6 (1�Jul�1999:�2.3.7 Filesystem Reorganization And Breakage)
Issue #24, Section #13 (24�Jun�1999:�FAT Patch Lingers Unapplied)
Issue #20, Section #4 (27�May�1999:�EFS Filesystem Appears In 2.3.2)
Issue #16, Section #2 (29�Apr�1999:�FAT Fixes)
Issue #12, Section #2 (1�Apr�1999:�FAT Fixes)
Issue #9, Section #19 (11�Mar�1999:�FAT Speedup)
Issue #5, Section #5 (11�Feb�1999:�Debugging Session)
Issue #2, Section #2 (21�Jan�1999:�Ensuring Unique Inodes In Microsoft's FAT Filesystem)

Share And Enjoy!

Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0.