14 character limitation in filenames
Brandon S. Allbery KB8JRR
allbery at NCoast.ORG
Fri Feb 1 11:35:32 AEST 1991
As quoted from <20711 at hydra.gatech.EDU> by ken at dali.gatech.edu (Ken Seefried iii):
+---------------
| In article <290 at sps.com> arm at sps.com (Annette Myjak) writes:
| >can anyone explain why there's the 14 character limitation in filenames
| >(11 + 3 for extension) in interactive unix?
|
| Cause AT&T is brain dead? Most all Version 7, System III and System V
| based Unixes have a 14 character filename limit (11+3? Where'd you
| get that?). Posix has also followed this silliness...
+---------------
"Silliness"? I still fail to understand why everyone wants to be able to
create files with humongous names --- I don't enjoy typing 14 character file
names (but don't want to decrease that size, there *is* a tradeoff here), the
30-plus-character names I've seen in use on some BSD systems don't appeal at
all.
(To those who complain, as they did last time, that the 14-char limit means
you can't encode a date in a filename: information is suppoosed to be stored
*inside* files, not in their filenames! And "910131193506" fits into a
filename if you absolutely *must* store the date in the filename for some
reason. (Personally, if I want to locate a file quickly according to some
attribute like that, I'll use an index file. It's often faster, too.))
++Brandon
--
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