IFolder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The correct title of this article is iFolder. The initial letter is shown capitalized due to technical restrictions.
iFolder

A screenshot of iFolder, running on Mac OS X
Developer: Novell
Latest release: 3.6 / March 28, 2007
OS: Linux, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Mac OS X, Solaris
Use: File sharing
License: GPL
Website: http://www.ifolder.com

iFolder is an open source application, developed by Novell, Inc., intended to allow cross-platform file sharing across computer networks.

iFolder operates on the concept of shared folders, where a folder is marked as shared and the contents of the folder are then synchronized to other computers over a network, either directly between computers in a peer-to-peer fashion or through a server. This is intended to allow a single user to synchronize their files between different computers (for example between a work computer and a home computer) or share files with other users (for example a group of people who are collaborating on a project).

The core of the iFolder is actually a project called Simias. It is Simias which actually monitors files for changes, synchronizes these changes and controls the access permissions on folders. The actual iFolder clients (including a graphical desktop client and a web client) are developed as separate programs that communicate with the Simias back-end.

[edit] History

Announced by Novell on March 19, 2001, iFolder was released on June 29, 2001 as a software package for Windows NT/2000 and Novell NetWare 5.1 or included with the forth-coming Novell NetWare 6.0. It also included the ability to access shared files through a web browser. [1]

iFolder Professional Edition 2, announced on March 13, 2002 and released a month later, added support for Linux and Solaris and web access support for Windows CE and Palm OS. This edition was also designed to share files between millions of users in large companies, with increased reporting features for administrators. [2]

On March 22, 2004, after their purchase of the Linux software companies Ximian and SUSE, Novell announced that they were releasing iFolder as an open source project under the GPL license. They also announced that the open source version of iFolder would use the Mono framework in an effort to ease development.

iFolder 3.0 was released on June 22, 2005.

On March 31, 2006, Novell announced that iFolder Enterprise Server is now Open Source.

[edit] Requirements

Currently iFolder 3.0 requires the use of an intermediate server (either Novell's commercial iFolder Enterprise Server or the open source iFolder Server), as the plugins that are needed for peer-to-peer file sharing (through either Gaim or Bonjour) are still under development.

[edit] External links

In other languages