From: guest Date: Fri, 25 Jul 2003 09:24:15 +0000 (+0000) Subject: none X-Git-Url: https://git.openafs.org/?p=openafs-wiki.git;a=commitdiff_plain;h=8c18fc3fc3957c48e01795bee4598f87d6468949 none --- diff --git a/AFSLore/AFSFrequentlyAskedQuestions.mdwn b/AFSLore/AFSFrequentlyAskedQuestions.mdwn index 66aed43..57f7e66 100644 --- a/AFSLore/AFSFrequentlyAskedQuestions.mdwn +++ b/AFSLore/AFSFrequentlyAskedQuestions.mdwn @@ -10,6 +10,8 @@ This Wiki document is based on afs-faq, version 1.113, dated 19:50 Thursday 9th - [[AboutTheFAQ]] - [[FurtherReading]] +- [[FullFAQIndex]] + ---- Updated: diff --git a/AFSLore/AdminFAQ.mdwn b/AFSLore/AdminFAQ.mdwn index 5403cfa..481df6e 100644 --- a/AFSLore/AdminFAQ.mdwn +++ b/AFSLore/AdminFAQ.mdwn @@ -581,6 +581,8 @@ I have not tested either of these procedures. -- [[TedAnderson]] - 05 Jun 2003 ### 3.29 What underlying filesystems can I use for AFS ? +See also [[SupportedConfigurations]]. + You need to distinguish between the filesystem used by the file server to store the actual AFS data (by convention in /vicep?) and the filesystem used by the client cache manager to cache files. With the new namei file server you can basically use any filesystem you want. Tne namei file server does not do any fancy stuff behind the scenes but only accesses normal files (their names are a bit strange though). diff --git a/AFSLore/FullFAQIndex.mdwn b/AFSLore/FullFAQIndex.mdwn new file mode 100644 index 0000000..77a5451 --- /dev/null +++ b/AFSLore/FullFAQIndex.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +This is the complete index for all the FAQ documents: diff --git a/AFSLore/SupportedConfigurations.mdwn b/AFSLore/SupportedConfigurations.mdwn index fb06da2..ed98a42 100644 --- a/AFSLore/SupportedConfigurations.mdwn +++ b/AFSLore/SupportedConfigurations.mdwn @@ -75,8 +75,10 @@ You can easily see that you are using an NAMEI file server if there is a directo These Don't Work - reiserfs, vxfs (HP-UX) + reiserfs, vxfs (HP-UX, Solaris) +- **Question:** Does this table imply that clients can't use the NAMEI backend and still need a specific filesystem? Will this ever change? + -- [[ToddLewis]] - 06 Nov 2002