I had always assumed the answer was yes, HDFS is implemented on top of Hadoop Key-Value store but I don't see any evidence (no I'm not going to read the source code!). I was hoping an article, document or paper would explain how HDFS manipulates the key-value NoSQL storage metamodel to implement the basic file operations like read, append, list directory, get metadata etc. Come to think of it, I wonder if AWS's S3 is also built on a NoSQL database.
Logically, I think you can model a file system using a key-value store where each pair represents a line in a file, which makes appending new data to large files a lot faster than a conventional file. But I would like to see if there are other practical considerations.
Why I'm asking
AWS S3 doesn't support appending to files and I really really want a persistent cloud storage that does AND I want the persistent storage to be accessible as a file system (so no RDBMS, KV, Columnar, Document DBs etc). I am wondering if HDFS is the answer to my application's needs.