I agree with Alf, we've been using afs (as clients) under fedora 12 in "reasonable modern" workstations (the oldest is a single core 4 yr old box :-) without any major show-stoppers. Yes, there is the annoying syslogging for large caches (more so when you boot the machine), but overall, we didn't notice a noticeable performance degradation (we didn't perform any statistical measures tough) at runtime.
We just picked the src.rpm and rebuilt it for fedora 12. One advantage that we found (if others can confirm this, it would be great) in using Fedora 12 (as afs client) is that we don't need the pam_afs_session anymore, the pam_krb5 provided in fedora correctly gets the kerberos tickets and afs tokens at loging time and we didn't need to mess around with the pam.d/* files (I remember prior Fedora 12, there was problem with pam_keyring revoking the afs tokens, etc). We don't use serial consoles, so Simon might be right about his performance concerns, and we didn't test fedora 12 as afs servers, but we are not seeing any bottlenecks for graphical workstations (KDE or Gnome). Again, we didn't make any rigorous testing, so take my words with caution until the experts confirm. Mauro On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Simon Wilkinson <[email protected]> wrote: > > On 8 Dec 2009, at 17:02, Alf Wachsmann wrote: > > OpenAFS version 1.4.11 works just fine on Fedora 12. >> > > Providing you don't care about performance, yes. But the level of logging > that the ima imbalance errors produce slows machines which log to a > graphical console, and renders those using serial consoles virtually > unusable. > > S. > > > _______________________________________________ > OpenAFS-info mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info >
