> Actually, I think you can. When compiling the linux kernel, If you
> turn on the "Network block device support", I think it does this.
> (Don't quote me on it though).
I am quoting you, Cole.
NBD provides the ability to use a raw block service from another
machine. It requires a block service daemon to be running on the
block server machine. It doesn't allow access to that machine's
devices other than the block device served by the block daemon.
NBD is most like Sun's "Network Disk" from the pre-NFS days.
Hope this helps,
ccb
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