I export via nfs from plan 9 to (l)unix at home. I think clients have
included OS X, linux, and openbsd.
I use p9p on Mac OS X. I helped Russ get a stacks problem solved on
Intel macs :-)
On 9/5/06, erik quanstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
this is probablly not exactly what you want, but p9p's 9p(1)
is able to read, write and ls a 9p connection. i'm pretty sure russ
has it going on osx. it mig
On 9/5/06, erik quanstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
this is probablly not exactly what you want, but p9p's 9p(1)
is able to read, write and ls a 9p connection. i'm pretty sure russ
has it going on osx. it might be just enough in a pinch.
it does indeed work on OS X. we've got a significant s
this is probablly not exactly what you want, but p9p's 9p(1)
is able to read, write and ls a 9p connection. i'm pretty sure russ
has it going on osx. it might be just enough in a pinch.
- erik
I wonder if a FUSE port would be possible. The Webdavfs stuff works
anyway via kernel extensions and userland cooperation.
Then we might just be able to use the FUSE 9p...
Of course a v9fs port may be more interesting overall.
Dave
On 9/5/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hell
On 9/5/06, Richard Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've been trying that, drawterm works, aquarela isn't working.
It uses the 'APOP secret', not the Plan 9 password.
If that's the case I guess I'll need to set that up also.
> I'm trying to connect to the local filesystem using \\ip\loca
> I've been trying that, drawterm works, aquarela isn't working.
It uses the 'APOP secret', not the Plan 9 password.
> I'm trying to connect to the local filesystem using \\ip\local or
> smb:///local.
I'm not sure the LOCAL share works. You might need a share name
which corresponds to something
anyone actually exporting nfs from plan 9 to linux?
Or are you all using the linux 9p implementation?
thanks
On 9/5/06, Richard Bilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 9/5/06, David Leimbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 9/5/06, Richard Bilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I've never had to add
On 9/5/06, David Leimbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 9/5/06, Richard Bilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've never had to add any special keys in order to access an aquarela
> share from a Windows machine -- I can connect to the share using the
> same password I use for drawterm.
>
I've been
On 9/5/06, Richard Bilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 9/5/06, David Leimbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 9/5/06, Richard Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > How does aquarela authenticate then? Is it the user that started the
> > > aquarela server or any valid plan 9 user?
> >
> > grep
On 9/5/06, David Leimbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 9/5/06, Richard Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > How does aquarela authenticate then? Is it the user that started the
> > aquarela server or any valid plan 9 user?
>
> grep -n auth_ /sys/src/cmd/aquarela/*.c
>
> Looks like it should wo
On 9/5/06, Richard Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How does aquarela authenticate then? Is it the user that started the
> aquarela server or any valid plan 9 user?
grep -n auth_ /sys/src/cmd/aquarela/*.c
Looks like it should work for any user with a key for proto=mschap.
Yep, I don't thi
> How does aquarela authenticate then? Is it the user that started the
> aquarela server or any valid plan 9 user?
grep -n auth_ /sys/src/cmd/aquarela/*.c
Looks like it should work for any user with a key for proto=mschap.
> Ever used Mac OS X NFS? :-) I've had quite negative experiences with
On 9/5/06, Richard Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "aquarela -n -p -u 0 -w plan9"
>
> and get:
>
> "hostannounce failed: dgram send failed"
>
> every so often.
...
> Does aquarela even do authentication? I'm finding basically no
> documentation on the whole thing but would like to try it out
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