----- Original Message -----
| On Oct 27 11:31:31, James A. Peltier wrote:
| > ----- Original Message -----
| > | > Pardon my ignorance in this matter, but what is it that is
| > | > unpleasing? The complexity of it? From my understanding, NFSv4
| > | > is
| > | > more firewall friendly, using only port 2049, and can also be
| > | > kerberized for additional security. Can OpenBSD's NFS
| > | > implementation
| > | > do that?
| > |
| > | NFSv4 is a gigantic joke on everyone.
| >
| > IMO, so is the notion of divine deities, but that doesn't answer the
| > original posters question, nor my response to Henning.
| >
| > We implemented, NFSv4 using AD, Kerberos, GNU/Linux and Mac OS X, no
| > OpenBSD though, and to me complexity was the biggest issue. It was
| > very difficult because of all the potential points of breakage and
| > inter-dependency. Out of all of the protocols though it was the most
| > transparent for our multi-platform support.
| 
| You mean, NFSv4 seems more "transparent" to you (whatever that means)
| than, say, NFSv2?

No, in that NFSv4 with Kerberos was an easier move from NFSv3 than to move to 
something like AFS, which seem would have required much more work to migrate 
the existing systems.

--
James A. Peltier
Systems Analyst (FASNet), VIVARIUM Technical Director
Simon Fraser University - Burnaby Campus
Phone   : 778-782-6573
Fax     : 778-782-3045
E-Mail  : jpelt...@sfu.ca
Website : http://www.fas.sfu.ca | http://vivarium.cs.sfu.ca
          http://blogs.sfu.ca/people/jpeltier
MSN     : subatomic_s...@hotmail.com

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