The ITS file system - larsbrinkhoff/its-manual GitHub Wiki
An ITS file is named by four components: device, directory, and two file names. Each component may be up to six characters from the upper-case ASCII subset. A device name is followed by colon, :, and a directory is followed by a semicolon, ;. All components except the first file name are optional, and may come in any order. However, the most common way is to write them is the order device: directory; fn1 fn2. The second file name is sometimes used as a edit version number. If the second file name is entered as >, it refers to the latest version for reading, or a new version for writing. < refers to the oldest version.
Some devices have no directories or file names, and just represent I/O for a device. Others have files, but no directories. The TTY: device has neither, but can still provide a file listing!
The main file system is on disk, which is device DSK:. The disk device has a magic file name M.F.D. (FILE), which is a listing of all directories. M.F.D. means Master File Directory and is the directory of directories. A user directory is sometimes called called U.F.D.. A user directory can only hold around 200 files. If more files are needed, sometmes "overflow directories" are created, usually with a suffix 1.
Some important system directories are:
.— Default directory for DSKDMP; holds bootable ITS binary.SYS— System executable programs. AlsoSYS1,SYS2, etc.SYSENG— System "English", i.e. source code, forSYS.SYSTEM— Source code for ITS itself.CHANNA— System demons.DRAGON— Puff the magic dragon, stores accounting information and other bookkeeping.DEVICE— Programs for user-space device drivers, and network daemons.
Some file name conventions:
- "
TSSOMETHING" is an ordinary executable program. "TS" means timesharing; e.g. "TS LISP" is Lisp for running under timesharing. - "
@SOMETHING" is a standalone program. "@" is the default first filename for DSKDMP. E.g. "@ LISP" is Lisp for running out of timesharing. - "SOMETHING
BIN" is the binary output from the MIDAS assembler. - "SOMETHING
ORDER" documents a list of commands for a program. - "
NSOMETHING" is the "new something", and "O*SOMETHING" is an older version.