Aow | Rootfs
This article strips away the abstraction. We will examine the AOW rootfs not as a directory tree ( / , /usr , /var ), but as a that defines causality, state, and time itself. 1. The Ontological Shift: From Storage to Causality In traditional Linux, the rootfs is a namespace. In AOW, the rootfs is a causal anchor .
This enables across physical hosts: cat /proc/aow/rootfs/stream > /dev/tcp/10.0.0.2/9999 pipes the entire rootfs causality graph over a socket. 7. Failure Modes: When the Rootfs Contradicts Itself The most dangerous error in AOW is causal inconsistency . Example: Process A reads file F at version V1. Process B writes file F, creating V2. Process A then writes to F. The rootfs detects a write-write conflict across versions . aow rootfs
Standard filesystems (EXT4, XFS, Btrfs) manage blocks and inodes. The AOW rootfs manages transactions . Every file is not a static blob but a . If you modify /etc/hostname , you haven't just changed a string; you have forked the world's identity. This article strips away the abstraction