A z/OS UNIX file system is a section of the UNIX file tree that
is physically contained on a single device or disk partition, and
that can be separately mounted, dismounted, and administered. UNIX
allows you to use a variety of file systems, including hierarchical
file system (HFS), Network File System (NFS), z/OS File System (zFS),
and temporary file system (TFS). UNIX files are byte-oriented. The
view of the data to the end user is a hierarchical directory structure
similar to IBM PC DOS. To access UNIX files, you specify the path
leading to them, as shown in Figure 1.
- Hierarchical file system
- A hierarchical file system (HFS) is part of the operating system
that includes the application programming interfaces. HFS enables
an application that is written in a high-level language to create,
store, retrieve, and manipulate data on a storage device.
- Network File System
- A Network File System
(NFS) is a distributed file system that enables users to access files
and directories located on remote computers and treat those files
and directories as if they were local. NFS is independent of machine
types, operating systems, and network architectures through the use
of remote procedure calls.
With z/OS UNIX, you can use the NFS
client to mount a file system, directory, or file from any system
with an NFS server within your directory.
- z/OS File System
- A
z/OS File System (zFS) is a VSAM linear data set (LDS). A zFS can
be SMS-managed or non-SMS managed; if non-SMS managed you can use
extended addressability to avoid the 4 GB size limit that is set for
SMS-managed data sets (for more information, see Using a non-SMS managed data set for a zFS version root larger than four gigabytes). You can share zFS files in a sysplex.
- Temporary file system
- A temporary file system
(TFS) is stored in memory and delivers high-speed I/O. You can mount
a TFS for storing temporary files.
Figure 1. UNIX Directories
and Files in a File System
For more information, see z/OS UNIX System Services Planning and z/OS V2R2.0 UNIX System Services User's Guide.