Filesystems using FUSE, that I know of. In order of appearance. If you find incorrect or outdated information here, please tell me. Also new entries are welcome. ============================================================================== Name: OW Author: Paul H. Alfille / palfille at partners org Homepage: http://owfs.sourceforge.net Description: OWFS uses FUSE to expose all the Dallas 1-wire sensors, iButtons and memory chips as a filesystem. Devices are dynamically included in the directory, and properties like temperature are obtained by reading a file. ============================================================================== Name: FunFS (status: alpha) Author: Michael Grigoriev (Net Integration Technologies) / mag at luminal org Homepage: http://www.luminal.org/wiki/index.php/FunFS/FunFS Description: FunFS is an advanced network file system with a simple goal: to be better than NFS. ============================================================================== Name: EncFS Author: Valient Gough / vgough at pobox com Homepage: http://pobox.com/~vgough/encfs.html Description: EncFS provides an encrypted filesystem in user-space. The EncFS module itself runs without any special permissions and uses the FUSE library and Linux kernel module to provide the filesystem interface. ============================================================================== Name: FUSE-J Author: Peter Levart / peter.levart at select-tech si Download: http://www.select-tech.si/fuse/ Alternate download: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~tdm25/fuse-j/ Description: FUSE-J provides Java binding for FUSE. It comes with the "proof-of-concept" ZIP filesystem which seems to be pretty stable. ============================================================================== Name: SMB for FUSE Author: Vincent Wagelaar / vincent at ricardis tudelft nl Homepage: http://hannibal.lr-s.tudelft.nl/fusesmb/ Description: With SMB for Fuse you can seamlessly browse your network neighbourhood as were it on your own filesystem. ============================================================================== Name: Run-Time-Access Author: Bob Smith / bsmith at linuxtoys org Homepage: http://www.runtimeaccess.com Description: RTA is a specialized memory resident interface to the internal data of your application. It is not a stand-alone server but a library which attaches to your program and offers up your program's internal structures and arrays as tables in a database and as files in a virtual file system. ============================================================================== Name: PhoneBook Author: David McNab / david at rebirthing co nz Homepage: http://www.freenet.org.nz/phonebook Description: PhoneBook is expressly designed for use in situations where someone can be under pressure (legal, military and/or criminal) to disclose decryption keys, and has a 'chaffing' scheme whereby the user can disclose only passphrases for non-sensitive material, and credibly deny the existence of anything else. ============================================================================== Name: KIO Fuse Gateway Author: Alexander Neundorf / neundorf at kde org Homepage: http://kde.ground.cz/tiki-index.php?page=KIO+Fuse+Gateway Description: This gateway makes it possible to mount ioslaves or a general ioslave-gateway via fuse and make them this way available to all linux apps. ============================================================================== Name: SULF - Stackable User-Level Filesystem (C# bindings) Author: Valient Gough / vgough at pobox com Homepage: http://arg0.net/users/vgough/sulf/index.html Description: SULF allows you to write a Linux filesystem in C#. It uses the FUSE library to do the actual Linux filesystem integration in user-space. ============================================================================== Name: LUFS bridge (alpha) Author: Miklos Szeredi / miklos at szeredi hu Homepage: http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=121684&package_id=132803 Description: This is a modified LUFS daemon, which uses the FUSE kernel module. It is binary compatible with existing LUFS filesystems, so no recompilation is needed. ============================================================================== Name: btfs (Bluetooth FileSystemMapping) Author: Collin R. Mulliner / collin at betaversion net Homepage: http://www.mulliner.org/bluetooth/btfs.php Description: Btfs is a simple application to map some basic bluetooth functions into the filesystem. With btfs a simple ls DEVICES shows you all bluetooth devices within range and cp somefile OPUSH/devicename sends the given file to the device. ============================================================================== Name: mcachefs Author: Michael Still / mikal at stillhq com Homepage: http://lists.samba.org/archive/linux/2004-March/010211.html Description: mcachefs is a simple caching filesystem for Linux using FUSE. It works by copying the file that you asked for when the file is opened, and then using that copy for all subsequent requests for the file. This is really a fairly naive approach to caching, and will be improved in the future. ============================================================================== Name: Fusedav Author: Lennart Poettering / mzshfrqni at 0pointer de Homepage: http://0pointer.de/lennart/projects/fusedav/ Description: fusedav is a Linux userspace file system driver for mounting WebDAV shares. It makes use of FUSE as userspace file system API and neon as WebDAV API. ============================================================================== Name: RelFS Author: Vincenzo Ciancia / vincenzo_ml at yahoo it Homepage: http://relfs.sourceforge.net/ Description: This is a linux userspace filesystem using fuse and a relational database to store information about files. Special directories can represent views on the database, and many powerful features, such as bayesian classification, are added through plugins. ============================================================================== Name: GmailFS Author: Richard Jones / richard at jones name Homepage: http://richard.jones.name/google-hacks/gmail-filesystem/gmail-filesystem.html Description: GmailFS provides a mountable Linux filesystem which uses your Gmail account as its storage medium. GmailFS is a Python application and uses the FUSE userland filesystem infrastructure to help provide the filesystem, and libgmail to communicate with Gmail. ============================================================================== Name: DataDraw Author: Bill Cox / bill at viasic com Homepage: http://www.viasic.com/opensource/ Description: This is an EDA specific data structure diagramming and code generation tool. ============================================================================== Name: gphoto2-fuse-fs Author: Christopher Lester / lester at hep phy cam ac uk Homepage: http://www.hep.phy.cam.ac.uk/~lester/gphoto2-fuse-fs/ Description: This program allows mounting a gphoto2 based digital camera so that you can access the files via "standard" programs like "ls, cat, tar, gthumb, netscape, firefox, etc" rather than just through "gtkam and gphoto2" ============================================================================== Name: cvsfs-fuse Author: Patrick Frank / pfrank at gmx de Homepage: http://sourceforge.net/projects/cvsfs Description: This provides a package which presents the CVS contents as mountable file system. It allows to view the versioned files as like they were ordinary files on a disk. There is also a possibility to check in/out some files for editing. ============================================================================== Name: Wayback (User-level Versioning File System for Linux) Author: Brian Cornell / techie at northwestern edu Homepage: http://wayback.sourceforge.net/ Description: When you use a Wayback file system, old versions of files are never lost. No matter how much you change a file or directory, everything is always kept in a versioning file so that you never lose important data. Wayback provides the ability to remount any already mounted file system with versioning support under a different directory. ============================================================================== Name: Trivial Rolebased Authorisation & Capability Statemachine (TRACS) Author: Rob J Meijer / rmeijer at xs4all nl Homepage: http://www.xs4all.nl/~rmeijer/tracs.html Description: This project is the first spin-off project of the Security Incident Policy Enforcement System project. In the process of designing a SIPES, the need was recognized for the implementation of an authorisation server that provides functionality not provided by any of the current authorisation solutions. ============================================================================== Name: SSHFS-FUSE Author: Miklos Szeredi / miklos at szeredi hu Homepage: http://fuse.sourceforge.net/sshfs.html Description: This is a filesystem client based on the SSH File Transfer Protocol. Since most SSH servers already support this protocol it is very easy to set up: i.e. on the server side there's nothing to do. On the client side mounting the filesystem is as easy as logging into the server with ssh. ============================================================================== Name: Siefs Author: Dmitry Zakharov aka Chaos / dmitry-z at mail ru Homepage: http://chaos.allsiemens.com/siefs Description: SieFS is a virtual filesystem for accessing Siemens mobile phones' memory (flexmem or MultiMediaCard) from Linux. Now you can mount your phone (by datacable or IRDA) and work with it like with any other removable storage. ============================================================================== Name: Offline Media Content Database (MediaDatabase) Author: Mediadatabase Team Homepage: http://mediadatabase.sourceforge.net/ Description: MediaDatabase is database to store filesystem metadata (directory structure) and/or audio tracks descriptions of offline media and frontends to database (WWW, GUI and CUI). It was developed to fight chaos of large compact disk collection but it can help track other removable media such as floppy disks and data DVDs. ============================================================================== Name: TCL FUSE interface Author: Colin McCormack / colin at chinix com Homepage: http://mini.net/tcl/13853 ============================================================================== Name: Python interface for FUSE Author: Jeff Epler Maintainer: Sebastien Delafond / sdelafond at gmx net CVS: cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/fuse co -P python ============================================================================== Name: Perl interface for FUSE Author: Mark Glines Maintainer: Dobrica Pavlinusic / dpavlin at rot13 org Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/~dpavlin/Fuse-0.05/ CVS: cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/fuse co -P perl ============================================================================== Name: Cddfs Author: Matthieu Castet Homepage: http://castet.matthieu.free.fr/cddfs/ Description: Cddfs [1] is a file system for fuse that use libparanoia in order to mount your audio cd. ============================================================================== Name: Fuse-J-shfs Author: Paul "Joey" Clark / joey at hwi ath cx Homepage: http://hwi.ath.cx/twiki/bin/view/Neuralyte/FuseJshfs Description: Fuse-J-shfs lets you easily implement a virtual filesystem in Unix shellscript. And naturally, it already has some handy vfs implementations you can use straight away: gzip, rar, sparse, ... ============================================================================== Name: SMBNetFS Author: Mikhail Kshevetskiy / kl at laska dorms spbu ru Homepage: http://smbnetfs.airm.net/ Description: SMBNetFS is a Linux filesystem that allow you to use samba/microsoft network in the same manner as the network neighborhood in Microsoft Windows. ============================================================================== Name: NTFS-FUSE Author: Yura Pakhuchiy / pakhuchiy at gmail com Homepage: http://linux-ntfs.sf.net/ Description: NTFS-FUSE is part of ntfsprogs package (utily name - ntfsmount). It's rely on libntfs. NTFS-FUSE support file overwrite changing it size and can list/read/write/add/remove named data streams via xattr interface. ============================================================================== Name: BTSlave (BitTorrent File System) Author: Bill Cox / bill at viasic com Homepage: http://btslave.sourceforge.net/ Description: BTSlave allows users to mount a BitTorrent .torrent file as a file system. ============================================================================== Name: GfarmFS-FUSE Author: Takuya Ishibashi / takuya at soum co jp Homepage: http://datafarm.apgrid.org/software/gfarmfs-fuse.en.html Description: GfarmFS-FUSE enables you to mount a Gfarm filesystem in userspace. Grid Datafarm is a Petascale data-intensive computing project initiated in Japan. The challenge involves construction of a Peta- to Exascale parallel filesystem exploiting local storages of PCs spread over the world-wide Grid. ============================================================================== Name: Clustered Ordinary Raid Network File System (CORNFS) Author: Ian C. Blenke / icblenke at nks net Homepage: http://ian.blenke.com/projects/cornfs/cornfs.html Description: CORNFS is an attempt at creating a distributed filesystem that mirrors N copies of files across a group of M number of servers. Everything in CORNFS is stored as a file. At any time, it is possible to reconstruct the entire filesystem via a simple overlay rsync from the remote filesystems. ============================================================================== Name: djmount Author: RĂ©mi Turboult / r3mi at users sourceforge net Homepage: http://djmount.sourceforge.net Description: Djmount allows to mount as a Linux filesystem the content of MediaServer devices compatible with the UPnP AV protocol. It discovers automatically all UPnP AV Media Servers on the network, and make the content available in a directory tree. An Audio or Video file is rendered as a playlist (.m3u or .ram) which contains an URL for the file. ==============================================================================