On 20 April 2013 14:48, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
can I do something like '9fs sources' but in p9p so that I could read
p9 (not port) sources in linux?
I'd guess it is possible, but I don't know how...
srv -n sources.cs.bell-labs.com sources
9p ls sources |
On 20 April 2013 19:11, David du Colombier 0in...@gmail.com wrote:
Using 9pfuse:
9pfuse sources.cs.bell-labs.com /n/sources
Using v9fs:
mount -t 9p 204.178.31.11 /n/sources
Both ways work for me, however, it is, for some reason, very slow.
(I wait several seconds before 'ls' shows its
Is it slow only for me?
9p doesn't play very well with high(er) latency networks, so much depends
on router perfornace and the geographic distance between you and the labs.
if you are unlucky enough to have your IP routed over satalite links
the performance will be very poor.
Having said all
Hello,
can I do something like '9fs sources' but in p9p so that I could read
p9 (not port) sources in linux?
I'd guess it is possible, but I don't know how...
Thanks!
Ruda
9vx is a good option.
On Apr 20, 2013 1:51 AM, Rudolf Sykora rudolf.syk...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
can I do something like '9fs sources' but in p9p so that I could read
p9 (not port) sources in linux?
I'd guess it is possible, but I don't know how...
Thanks!
Ruda
can I do something like '9fs sources' but in p9p so that I could read
p9 (not port) sources in linux?
I'd guess it is possible, but I don't know how...
srv -n sources.cs.bell-labs.com sources
9p ls sources | mc
it's actually exactly the same as plan 9; you could use
plan 9's
can I do something like '9fs sources' but in p9p so that I could read
p9 (not port) sources in linux?
I'd guess it is possible, but I don't know how...
Using 9pfuse:
9pfuse sources.cs.bell-labs.com /n/sources
Using v9fs:
mount -t 9p 204.178.31.11 /n/sources
You can also do the same using