Fsck uses short for inode number. (Sco xenix [23]86)

Bodo Rueskamp br at laura.UUCP
Wed Apr 26 00:54:07 AEST 1989


In article <459 at mrecvax.UUCP> tron at mrecvax.UUCP (Carlos Mendioroz) writes:
>The problem with doing so is that almost every utility that comes
>with xenix thinks that an inode number is < 2^16. Fsck belongs to
>this family...

That's a kernel limit. Layout of a directory entry:
	2 bytes inode number + 14 bytes file name = 16 bytes dir entry

--
Bodo Rueskamp, <br at unido.uucp>



More information about the Comp.unix.xenix mailing list