In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Harti Brandt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: : MWL>Does anybody have experience with using FreeBSD 4.x or 6.x NFS clients : MWL>against a Windows 2003 NFS server? What is the performance relative : MWL>to using a FreeBSD NFS server? What is the stability? Does locking : MWL>work? Does the Windows 2003 server have extensions that grok file : MWL>system flags? : : I use this regularily (well, -CURRENT). I have no numbers, but performance : is ok. I have the home directories on a W2003k server and it 'feels' fast : enough.
We see FreeBSD to FreeBSD NFS feeling fast enough for most things, but when we do a full build of our system from scratch it takes 10 hours over NFS vs 1 hour on a local disk. We're worried that if we were to try to do heavy NFS traffic to a Win2003 server with SFU this would be even slower. : The only problem I see is a lot of 'file server not reponding' and 'file : server up again' (with 2-3 seconds in between). This is usually when : saving a large mail from pine. Linux clients see the same problem, so I : suppose it is a problem on the SFU side. So building large binaries might be a problem? : Locking seems to work. Does "seems to work" mean it really does work, or does SFU just do the old trick of saying 'ok, your lock worked'? : Problems : are with filenames that are illegal for NTFS - hosting a 2.11BSD source : tree on a W2003 NFS share does not work because of filenames containing : ':' :-). I've not tested what other characters are illegal. That would be a problem for hosting a ports tree on the NTFS nfs partition, no? : Another problem is that on the NTFS side there is no good way to backup, : copy, whatever the trees, because while NTFS handles Makefile and : makefile, no Windows tool can access both of them. Even worse thinks like : ADSM backup sometimes die with internal errors. That's ugly. : Mapping of UIDs and GIDs is rather magic. The FreeBSD side, the SFU tools : and cygwin all see different numbers which is rather annoying. The same is : with symbolic links. Symblic links point elsewhere? or have different destinations? Does it matter absolute or relative? : The file flags are not supported by the server. There are no extensions : that I know of. Same problem with FreeBSD to FreeBSD NFS. Warner _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"