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I strongly disagree

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I strongly disagree with this sentence: "The IFS interface changes in every Windows version, making it almost impossible to use an IFS designed for one Windows version to work in another." The interface was backwards compatible from Windows NT 4 (at least) up to Windows XP. In Windows Server 2003 there was change (http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:DhqBIa-huxsJ:https://www.osronline.com/article.cfm%3Farticle%3D283&hl=en) that could have broken several drivers, but the interface still remains largely the same . - Filip Navara

Well I wrote that sentence more on practical experience.
I tested a NT 3.1 IFS in NT 4 and worked (only the IFS, not the tools -chkdsk, format-, that failed).
Tried the same on 2000 and not worked at all.
However I didn't tried a NT 4 one on 2k or a 2k one on XP.
Also I remember that a Microsoft guy said me that the IFSs weren't backwards compatible, when I got IFSKits for 2000 and XP, but I lost that e-mail.
Claunia 23:45, 20 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

IFS was also present in Windows 9x/ME

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For those who doubt me, the relevant structures and api is covered by ifs.h in the win98 DDK. Actually, there was a pretty good book which was written about it:

  • Mitchell, Stan (1997). Inside the Windows 95 File System (1st Edition ed.). O'Reilly Media. ISBN 978-1-56592-200-6. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

More info on this book can be found here and here. --130.127.121.188 16:44, 5 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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DOS 4.x?!?

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I would like to see just one (acceptable) source that IFS was ever available in DOS. AFAIK IFS was developed for OS/2 and introduced in OS/2 1.2. Since Microsoft and IBM, who both were developing OS/2, had a strong disagreement on how OS/2 should be done, Microsoft left the development. OS/2 2.0 was from IBM alone, and Microsoft took the code and made Windows NT out of it. Along with Presentation Manager, one of the things that got included in Windows NT was IFS, which was then also ported to Windows 3.11 and is part of Windows ever since, as it is part of OS/2 ever since.

But not DOS.

This should either be verified from a reliable source (which, honestly, I doubt exists), or deleted. Soon.

Andreas 13:14, 8 December 2021 (UTC)[reply]

IFS per se does not exist in DOS, at all, dunno who created that entry.
In DOS 3.1 the network redirector was introduced, and was considered stable API/ABI since DOS 4.0 onward, I suppose that's where the confusion is.
The network redirector was basically a driver interface that allows to redirect file i/o to network shares, and it was used, effectively, as a way to implement local filesystems, including most famously, MSCDEX.
There is a good explanation about them in http://www.os2museum.com/wp/redirectors-and-dos-3-0/
also they have their own page at Network redirector, and in any case their usage as a primitive IFS system should be added there, and not here.
I agree that the DOS 4.0 section makes no sense here, and I vote to remove it if you want.
Claunia (talk) 01:25, 11 December 2021 (UTC)[reply]