From 1f24141807b02a42d51bab04324b2dc816404d1e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: alhimik45 Date: Fri, 5 Jan 2018 01:36:11 +0700 Subject: [PATCH] fix README --- README | 89 ++-------------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 87 deletions(-) diff --git a/README b/README index 50b4f2a..6e09ef5 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,88 +1,3 @@ -This is a Mono/.NET binding for FUSE. +This is a .NET Standard binding for FUSE, port of [mono-fuse](https://github.com/jonpryor/mono-fuse) library. -Short HOWTO: - -Within one terminal: - sudo /sbin/modprobe fuse # need FUSE kernel module to use. - ./configure - make - cd example/HelloFS - mkdir t - ./hellofs t - -Within another terminal - cd example/HelloFS - ls t - cat t/hello - -This should display files controlled by HelloFS.exe. - -To unmount the filesystem, you need to use the `fusermount' program: - cd example/HelloFS - fusermount -u t - -KILLING THE FUSE PROGRAM IS NOT ENOUGH. The program will die, but -FUSE and the kernel will still think that the directory is mounted. -Result: you can't remount the directory, and trying to do anything -with it will result in IO errors. - -For full trace output, set the MONO_TRACE_LISTENER environment -variable and add the -odebug command-line argument: - - cd example/HelloFS - MONO_TRACE_LISTENER=Console.Out### ./hellofs -odebug t - -MONO_TRACE_LISTENER controls the Mono.Fuse trace output, while --odebug controls the libfuse-generated trace output. - -`hellofs' also takes its own command-line aruments. By default, -it exports two files, `data' and `hello'. `hello' contains the -string "Hello World!", while `data' is a 100 MB (base 10) file that -generates its content on-demand. - -If you pass the --data.im-in-memory flag, a `data.im' file will be -available which is a 100MB (base 10) file with the same contents as -`data', but it is backed by a 100MB byte[] instead of generating its -contents on demand: - - cd example/HelloFS - ./hellofs --data.im-in-memory t - -The 100MB byte[] is allocated the first time the contents of -`data.im' are read. - -`data.im' is useful to see the difference in performance between -generate-on-demand and cached behaviors: - - cd example/HelloFS - ./hellofs --data.im-in-memory t - - # On-demand copy - time cp t/data f.txt - real 0m8.469s - user 0m0.020s - sys 0m1.128s - - # In-memory copy - # Note that the first `data.im' access is longer - # because it needed to allocate the array. - # Subsequent calls are shorter: - time \cp -f t/data.im f.txt - real 0m12.393s - user 0m0.004s - sys 0m1.172s - time \cp -f t/data.im f.txt - real 0m5.233s - user 0m0.016s - sys 0m1.136s - - # And for comparison, cp without FUSE: - time cp f.txt f2.txt - real 0m10.252s - user 0m0.016s - sys 0m1.000s - -And yes, on my machine it's faster to go through FUSE than to go -through the filesystem (though usually the filesystem outperforms -the on-demand generation). My machine is probably misconfigured. :-/ -Your mileage will vary. +For documentation see [here](http://www.jprl.com/Projects/mono-fuse/docs/). \ No newline at end of file