Beta 2.5 kernel?
Ron Peterson
ron.peterson at yellowbank.com
Thu Aug 29 23:30:10 EDT 2002
On Thu, Aug 29, 2002 at 09:50:13PM -0400, Derek Atkins wrote:
> Ron Peterson <ron.peterson at yellowbank.com> writes:
>
> > On Thu, Aug 29, 2002 at 09:18:01PM -0400, Robert La Ferla wrote:
> >
> > > Has anyone tried out the beta 2.5 kernels? How stable are they? What
> > > does 2.5 offer over 2.4? Is it worth trying???
> >
> > The thing I think I'm looking forward to the most is NFSv4 support,
> > which I believe was just recently being rolled into the 2.5 series.
> > NFSv3 is insecure. AFS has the requisite features to be considered a
> > viable secure distributed filesystem, but has never really caught on. I
> > hat to say it, but SMB, for all of its flaws, remains a legitimate
> > contender.
>
> SMB is a contender?? Why? There is no security in it at all.
Well, w/ nfs3 all I have to do is boot from a floppy and fake a uid. At
least smb makes it a /little/ harder...
> NFSv4 is probably fine for small clusters, but (last I heard) doesn't
> have the volume management features of AFS.
Tell me more.
> I think AFS' only failure is lack of a reasonable marketing
> department.
I've been using debian rather than RH lately, and now that I look I see
all kinds of openafs-* packages are available. Cool. IIRC, last time I
looked into it, I believe was using RH, and there was nothing I could
'up2date'. Keeping lots of machines current can be a chore. This is a
big reason I've been turning to debian. Red Hat has up2date, but I can
more easily maintain a local debian mirror, blah blah
> > How do you set up a cluster of Linux workstations to have secure access
> > to a shared filesystem? It's a bitch.
>
> Personally, I use AFS. :)
OK, now that I see it may be easier than the last time I looked, I'm going to look
into it. Nice to know there's someone here using it.
--
Ron Peterson -o)
87 Taylor Street /\\
Granby, MA 01033 _\_v
https://www.yellowbank.com/ ----
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