setting up nfs

Joel Gwynn joelman at world.std.com
Thu Jul 26 17:00:26 EDT 2001


Thanks for all the educational responses.  I get it, I get it.  I'm looking into
openafs.

Jerry Feldman wrote:

> I would have thought that it would even be longer. Assuming your host
> provider's LAN was 100Mbps, and T1 is 1.5Mbps.
> But, not only are you bottolenecking the diskio, you are throwing
> significant additional traffic onto the slower line which affects other users
> of that line.
>
> When properly configured and managed, NFS (or more generically a
> network file system) can be very efficient. Your file server itself should
> have relatively fast drives and relatively low use for other purposes. Users
> should be spread around different subnets, but the server should have
> multiple NICs such that network disk I/O does not cross routers.
>
> On 26 Jul 2001, at 11:26, Scott Lanning wrote:
>
> > At work, our host provider temporarily switched a development machine
> > to use NFS over a T1, and as a result MySQL queries would take 10
> > times longer than usual (or longer). And when trying to list
> > directories, it would occasionally give NFS errors indicating
> > that NFS wasn't responding.
>
> Jerry Feldman <gaf at blu.org>
> Associate Director
> Boston Linux and Unix user group
> http://www.blu.org
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--
========[Joel-Gwynn]-[joelman at joelman.com]=======
A train station is where a train stops.
A bus station is where a bus stops.
So now you know why they call this a workstation.



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