### <a name="1.02 Who supplies AFS?"></a> 1.02 Who supplies AFS?
-There are currently three sources for AFS: Commercial Transarc (now part of IBM), the open sourced version of former Transarc AFS called [[OpenAFS]] and the independent open source project [[Arla]].
+There are currently three sources for AFS: Commercial Transarc (now part of IBM), the open sourced version of former Transarc AFS called [[OpenAFS]] and the independent open source project [[ArlaAFS]].
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</tr>
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<td> 3. </td>
- <td>[[Main/Arla]]</td>
+ <td>[[Main/ArlaAFS]]</td>
<td> WWW: <a href="http://www.stacken.kth.se/projekt/arla/" target="_top">http://www.stacken.kth.se/projekt/arla/</a></td>
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</table>
- <http://www.umlug.umd.edu/linuxafs/>
-Check out the [[OpenAFS]] and [[Arla]] pages for port avilablity.
+Check out the [[OpenAFS]] and [[ArlaAFS]] pages for port avilablity.
### <a name="1.07 What does "ls /afs" displa"></a> 1.07 What does "ls /afs" display in the Internet AFS filetree?
-[[AFS]] is a distributed network filesystem originially developed as part of the [[AndrewProject]] at [[CarnegieMellonUniversity]] in the mid 1980's. It provides a number of useful features over traditional network filesystems, including:
+AFS is a distributed network filesystem originially developed as part of the [[AndrewProject]] at [[CarnegieMellonUniversity]] in the mid 1980's. It provides a number of useful features over traditional network filesystems, including:
- [[AccessControlLists]]
- [[UserManagedGroups]]
- [[IBM/AFS]]
- [[OpenAFS]]
-- [[Arla]]
+- [[ArlaAFS]]
-Elsewhere on this site are a guide to [[GettingStarted]] with [[AFS]], some [[AncientHistory]], and a variety of AFS3 [[ProtocolInfo]].
+Elsewhere on this site are a guide to [[GettingStarted]] with AFS, some [[AncientHistory]], and a variety of AFS3 [[ProtocolInfo]].
-- [[JeffreyHutzelman]] - 18 Jan 2002