At 04:25 PM 12/12/2007, Jeffrey Altman wrote:
John Hascall wrote:
> And it's not clear to me how much
> longer AFS will be our main filesystem.

What would be needed to keep AFS as your main file system?

Well mine are clearly data integrity and reliability. Speed is important, but speed without some guarantee of data integrity is pointless. Over the years of using AFS on Windows, we've seen more issues related to data integrity than we should have seen compared to other network file systems, and I've regarded this as disturbing. Much more effort needs to go into thoroughly throttling the file system to check for data irregularities and file lookup glitches between the clients and the file servers, than opting for speed improvements.

I know some of the problems are due to how the Windows client works compared to the 'nix client, but the 'nix clients have shown themselves to be very reliable.

Rodney

Rodney M. Dyer
Operations and Systems (Specialist)
Mosaic Computing Group
William States Lee College of Engineering
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Web: http://www.coe.uncc.edu/~rmdyer
Phone: (704)687-3518
Help Desk Line: (704)687-3150
FAX: (704)687-2352
Office:  Cameron Hall, Room 232

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