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{{Short description|CD-ROM file system}}
The '''Compact Disc File System''' was a file system for read-only and write-once CDROMs developed by Simson Garfinkel and J. Spencer Love at the MIT Media Lab between 1985 and 1986.<ref>{{cite article|title=A File System for Write-Once Media|author=Simson L. Garfinkel|publisher=MIT Media Lab|year=1986|month=September|url=http://simson.net/clips/academic/1986.CDFS.pdf}}</ref> The file system provided for the creation, modification, renaming and deletion of files and directories on a write-once media. The file system was developed with a write-once CDROM simulator and was used to master one of the first CDROMs in 1986. CDFS was never sold, but its source code was published on the Internet and the CDROMs were distributed to Media Lab sponsors. The file system was the basis of WOFS (Write Once File System),<ref>{{cite article|title=Designing a Write-Once File System|journal=Dr. Dobb's Journal|author=Simson L. Garfinkel|year=1991|url=http://simson.net/clips/1991/1991.DDJ.WOFS.pdf}}</ref> sold by N/Hance systems in 1989.▼
{{confused|ISO 9660}}
▲The '''Compact Disc File System'''
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Filesystem}}
[[Category:Computer file systems]]
[[Category:Compact disc]]
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