The two systems share home directories using a networked file system. The most obvious candidate for a networked filesystem between Linux and Solaris is a filesystem called NFS. There are others, but NFS is most likely.
It could be that the home directories are hosted on the Solaris machine and "NFS exported", and the Linux machine has NFS mounted them. Or it could be the other way around, with the directories being hosted on the Linux box and Solaris mounting them remotely. Or, the files could be hosted elsewhere and both the Linux and Solaris machines are mounting them remotely. In this case, it is possible that the files are hosted on a NAS (which in my mind an appliance dedicated to serving up files remotely). Or your home directory could be coming from some other Network File Server. Gilbert On Mon, Jan 04, 2010 at 10:16:57PM -0500, Hai Yi wrote: > Hello All, Happy new year! > > There are two boxes, one is Solaris and the other Linux, when either > is entered, the default directory is my home directory; when making > changes on one, the changes can be seen on the other. This is my > corporate environment. Is that because these two boxes are mapping to > a NAS server? > > I don't know about too much about NAS, just a wild guess - anyone can > educate me? > > Thanks, > Hai _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list [email protected] http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
