On Thu, 17 Mar 2011 14:28:07 -0500 "Boyd Stephen Smith Jr." <b...@iguanasuicide.net> wrote:
> On 2011-03-17 14:08:29 Celejar wrote: > >I want to set up a network filesystem to share files between several > >linux systems (Debian & OpenWrt). Judging from what I see on the list > >and elsewhere, NFS stills seems to be the standard, but I am aware that > >newer options are available, e.g. Coda and OpenAFS. Since I don't need > >any legacy or non-linux support, should I try one of those, or just > >stick with NFS? > > Already using Kerberos everywhere? If not, don't bother with AFS. I'm not > sure about Coda, but I think it is the same situation. Would you mind elaborating a bit? Are you talking about security, authentication, encryption? > NFS (v4 if you can) is still the "go-to" for accessing a file system across a > network connection. (NBD, iSCSI, and ATAoE all operate underneath a file > system, you might be able to use them with a cluster-aware file system for > sharing, but double-mounting a normal file system is a no-no.) Thanks. Celejar -- foffl.sourceforge.net - Feeds OFFLine, an offline RSS/Atom aggregator mailmin.sourceforge.net - remote access via secure (OpenPGP) email ssuds.sourceforge.net - A Simple Sudoku Solver and Generator -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110317155337.04748e9c.cele...@gmail.com