distributed file systems
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Sean Dilda agrajag at scyld.comTue Sep 4 17:24:20 PDT 2001
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On Fri, 31 Aug 2001, Jon Tegner wrote: > Haven't tried, but it seems that afs should be slightly faster than > nfs, see > > http://www.ait.iastate.edu/olc/storage/afs/nfs2afs.txt.html As someone who has experience with afs as a user and an administrator, I can tell you it is definately not what you want for a cluster. AFS is very nice if you have a very large deployment of machines (like a campus with over 50,000 users), however for a self-contained cluster, it has way to much overheard and adds unnecessary complications to administration. As far as speed, I think nfs is actually faster than afs. On top of these, there are also stability issues, there are serious problems with every implementation of AFS I know of for linux, this includes Transarc's closed source implementation, the OpenAFS project which is based on Transarc's code, and the code for arla, an implementation of AFS from scratch. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 232 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://www.scyld.com/pipermail/beowulf/attachments/20010904/eb01391f/attachment.bin
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