Semantic file system
Semantic file systems are file systems used for information persistence which structure the data according to their semantics and intent, rather than the location as with current file systems. It allows the data to be addressed by their content (associative access). Traditional hierarchical file-systems tend to impose a burden, for example when a sub-directory layout is contradicting a user's perception of where files would be stored. Having a tag-based interface alleviates this hierarchy problem and enables users to query for data in an intuitive fashion.
Semantic file systems raise technical design challenges as indexes of words, tags or elementary signs of some sort have to be created and constantly updated, maintained and cached for performance to offer the desired random, multi-variate access to files in addition to the underlying, mostly traditional block-based filesystem.
See also
External links
Research & Specifications
- Towards Semantic File System Interfaces, Proceedings of the International Semantic Web Conference 2008
- Semantic File Systems
- The Sile Model. A Semantic File System Infrastructure for the Desktop
- Semantic FS @ MIT Programming Systems Research Group
- Launchpad Blueprints: A tag-based filesystem for Ubuntu
- ReiserFS future vision
- external list of related work on semantic file systems @ semanticweb.org
Implementations
- SemFS - A Semantic approach to File Systems, was TagFS
- Tagsistant - Tagsistant: semantic filesystem for Linux (Linux), see Wikipedia article Tagsistant
- TransparenTag - File system compatible with point'n'click and command-line interfaces
- tagxfs - A tag based user space file system extension
- Fuse::TagLayer - A read-only tag-filesystem overlay for hierarchical filesystems (Perl, Linux)
- xtagfs - XTagFS is a FUSE filesystem that organizes files/folders using 'Spotlight Comment' tags (Mac OS X)
- dhtfs - Tagging based filesystem, providing dynamic directory hierarchies based on tags associated with files (Python, Linux)