NFS for ESIX
Joy Correa
joyco at uhccux.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu
Fri Sep 21 05:35:59 AEST 1990
In article <1990Sep18.071534.3162 at pegasus.com> richard at pegasus.com (Richard Foulk) writes:
>> I'd like to get comments from anybody who's had experience using
>>ESIX's NFS to link to Suns or other Unix platforms. I've been running
>>ESIX Rev C TCP/IP for Telnet and FTP links with Suns here on our ethernet
>>and it seems to work well. My next step will be to upgrade to Rev D and get
>>the ESIX NFS package going. The ultimate goal is to get NFS running on an
>>ESIX 486 system and try it out as a low cost server for some of our slower
>>Suns (3/50s and 60s). Before I dive into this I thought I'd check with the
>>net to see if anybody has tried this yet, or am I nuts ;) I'll sum up
>>to the net if there's enough interest.
>
>It kinda sounds like a bad idea because of the short file names.
>Things would probably get messy when the Suns tried to create files
>greater than 14 character long.
>
>I've been thinking about doing something similar, but figured it would
>have to wait until SVR4 becomes available.
>
We've got ESIX Rev D running with ESIX NFS hooked up to a Sony NEWS workstation
and it seems to be running fine (just installed NFS a couple of days ago). We
are doing this for a client who will be tight on disk space on his Sony. At any
rate, it feels just like NFS on a SUN (almost).
As for long filenames, since Rev D. comes with a BSD filesystem, it should
be possible (at least in theory) to get long filenames. In fact, I have
contacted ESIX tech support and they claim that they will be posting a
response to my question to the net.
Frank Godek
Integral Software
e-mail: godek at isshi.pegasus.com
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