Yep...
Figured so.... This was just one option I used about a year ago.
Thanks.
-Bryan

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 12:47 PM
To: Bryan Boone
Cc: Indiana Discuss
Subject: Re: [indiana-discuss] How good will Indiana be for desktop computing?

I think there are already better options than that.

   - For example, you could try the CIFS (aka SMB) Client beta's here:
http://opensolaris.org/os/project/smbfs/
  Here is some more information:
       http://blogs.sun.com/amw/entry/cifs_in_solaris

And it appears that zfs is or will soon be able to export CIFS
   - http://blogs.sun.com/dougm/entry/smb_vs_zfs


Bryan Boone wrote:
> I'll keep that in mind...
> I'm in a heterogenous environment (Linux, Unix, Solaris, OS X,
> Windows), so that is the need (want) for smb/cifs to be a "1st class"
> citizen.
> I _could_ use my OS X box to mount all the smb mounts in the company
> then re-expose them as nfs... hmmm.....
> Thanks for the info.
> -Bryan
>
> Brian Nitz wrote:
>> My mistake,  the path which is dragged into the terminal is the
>> gnome-vfs path which is NOT exported as a filesystem mount:
>>
>> smb://{hostname}/windowspath/logs/myfile.txt
>>
>> The fact that Nautilus's (gnome-vfs) smb/nfs/davfs... mounts are not
>> exported as mount points is one of the reasons that the GNOME
>> community is in the process of replacing the gnome-vfs backend with
>> gvfs which will be able to export these mountpoints via FUSE:
>>
>> http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2007-February/msg00062.
>> html
>>
>>
>> Bryan Boone wrote:
>>> Will this be predictable?  That is, can I set a softlink to it?
>>> This is a feature I wasn't aware of.
>>> Thanks for the info.
>>> (Getting tempted to free up my 64 bit linux box for Indiana ;)) -B
>>>
>>> Brian Nitz wrote:
>>>> SMB shares should be visible to the command line.  Try this:
>>>>
>>>> Launch gnome-terminal
>>>> Open your smb mount in Nautilus and navigate to a file on the smb
>>>> filesystem Drag the file to the terminal
>>>>
>>>> This should paste the path of the file into your terminal.
>>>>
>>>> If it doesn't paste the actual path into the terminal that you can
>>>> navigate to via the command line, you should log a bug.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Bryan Boone wrote:
>>>>> "kinda there"  means I can see it with nautilus, but not from the
>>>>> command line.
>>>>> It would be nice to be able to create say, a softlink to it (can
>>>>> I?), after the space has been mounted.
>>>>> That way I can mount foreing filesystems and use them as my own.
>>>>> -Bryan
>>>>>
>>>>> ________________________________________
>>>>> From: Robert Thurlow [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>>> Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2008 3:49 PM
>>>>> To: Bryan Boone
>>>>> Cc: Giacomo Tufano; Brian Nitz; [email protected]
>>>>> Subject: Re: [indiana-discuss] How good will    Indiana be
>>>>> for     desktop computing?
>>>>>
>>>>> Bryan Boone wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> My desktop computing requirements are a little more modest.
>>>>>> I develop Java apps for my company.
>>>>>> So I need Java, nfs, and smb (cifs).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Java, I think is there.
>>>>>> NFS is there.
>>>>>> SMB is kinda there, but I'd like to mount it via fstab (or the
>>>>>> Solaris
>>>>>> equivalent)
>>>>>>
>>>>> By "kinda there", do you mean what you see in Nautilus aka File
>>>>> Manager?  Yes, that's useful but not a "real" file system.
>>>>>
>>>>> A new CIFS client was integrated into Nevada build 84 - see if it
>>>>> comes closer, but note there are still some things it doesn't know
>>>>> how to do yet:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.opensolaris.org/os/project/smbfs/
>>>>>
>>>>> Rob T
>>>>>
>>

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