Reaching outside of UNIX, RSX/11 used external
supervisor-mode processes called ACPs (ancillary
control processes) to implement file systems.
I don't know exactly how they were plugged in,
but I do know they were pluggable, so their
interface must have constituted a file-system
switch of some sort. RSX dates back into the
1970s.
At some point in the latter part of the 1980s,
Ralph Stamerjohn (a name instantly recognizable
in the 16-bit DEC software world) gave a DECUS
talk about implementing a remote file system
through ACPs: a stub ACP on the client exporting
RPCs over the network, a real one at the server
end. I remember chatting with him about how
that did and didn't resemble the way pjw had
done it; interesting architectural comparison.
Norman Wilson
Toronto ON
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Pr1me had remote filesystems circa 1981 at least, maybe even earlier.
It was quite transparent, something equivalent to //node/path/to/file.
I only ever used Primos through the Georgia Tech Software Tools Subsytem
which made the filesystem look Unix-y. I don't know any more details.
HTH,
Arnold