The concept of vnode differs to a degree depending on what system you're under, everyone just kind of took the name and ran with it.
Under Linux and Unix, you can consider the abstraction as follow.
Suppose there exists
f.tmp
You want f to stick around while your program is running, because you're accessing it, but if your program ends or crashes, you want to be sure it goes away.
You can do this by opening f, and then unlink()
it. You will still retain a reference to f, even though its inode now has 0 directory entries, and so has been marked free. The operating system is still retaining where the file started and its allocation state, until your program ends. This "virtualization" of the inode that no longer exists is a vnode.
Another common situation for this is when you're reading a resource that disappears out from under you. Suppose you're watching a movie, while it is streaming to a temporary location. When the movie is completely downloaded, it will be relocated to another volume for storage. Somehow you can continue watching and scrubbing through the movie so long as it remains open. In this case even though there are again no links, since there is a vnode, this inode can't be cleaned up yet.