[SlugLUG] Best remote FS for windows/linux/mac?

Matt Thrailkill mthrailk at ucsc.edu
Sat Oct 28 18:31:00 PDT 2006


You have to installer Microsoft's Services for Unix to be able to
mount/export nfs shares from Windows.  The most recent version they have
made free now.  It still isn't that easy to use.  I had the hardest time
mounting nfs with it last time I tried, but I've made it work in the
past.

On Sat, 2006-10-28 at 18:28 -0700, cerise at armory.com wrote:
> It's kind of a wash.  SMB can do them OK, but you have to muck around
> with their password file and map UIDs and so on.  That alone makes it lose
> in the easiness battle to me.  With NFS, you edit /etc/exports and restart
> the daemon.  That's pretty darn easy.
> 
> Security's kind of a wash too.  NFS is all host-based access, so it's only
> as secure as the ability for someone to mount it and get login credentials 
> for a given UID.  Samba does have more features, but I'm not convinced they
> make it more secure. 
> 
> I had thought that Windows 2k, XP, &c had NFS support built in.  I guess I
> was wrong.  That would make it unsuitable for Karl's purposes.
> 
> -Phil/CERisE
> 
> On Sat, Oct 28, 2006 at 06:04:28PM -0700, Peter Belew wrote:
> > And of course Windows provides a free client, while one may
> > have to buy an NFS client for Windows. I haven't had any
> > reason to go that route recently, so I don't know if there
> > are free Windows NFS clients.
> > 
> > Between *nix systems, though, possibly nfs handles *nix
> > permissions better?
> > 
> > - Peter
> > 
> > On 10/28/06, Matt Thrailkill <mthrailk at ucsc.edu> wrote:
> > > I don't have anything against nfs, I use it at home myself.  I'm just
> > > saying that some people recommend samba over nfs in any case.  They say
> > > its more secure, more reliable, more performant, easier, and has more
> > > options that come in handy.
> > >
> > > On Sat, 2006-10-28 at 16:56 -0700, cerise at armory.com wrote:
> > > > Why?  What do you have against NFS?
> > > >
> > > > I find it to be less of a handful in general.  Also, SMB won't mount Very Large
> > > > shares (near 1TB or so) for me.
> > > >
> > > > -Phil/CERisE
> > > >
> > > > On Sat, Oct 28, 2006 at 04:25:32PM -0700, Matt Thrailkill wrote:
> > > > > Samba is probably your best bet.  Some people say that even if it were
> > > > > all Linux machines installed, Samba would be a better choice than using
> > > > > say nfs.
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