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NFS Past, Present & Future

NFS Past, Present & Future. David F. Brittle Sr Mgr., File Sharing Technologies Sun Microsystems, Inc. david.brittle@sun.com. “The one thing I have learned from watching my son play video games is that if you stand still long enough you die,” Anonymous. Agenda. History Current Status

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NFS Past, Present & Future

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  1. NFS Past, Present & Future David F. Brittle Sr Mgr., File Sharing Technologies Sun Microsystems, Inc. david.brittle@sun.com

  2. “The one thing I have learned from watching my son play video games is that if you stand still long enough you die,” Anonymous

  3. Agenda • History • Current Status • WebNFS • Pointers

  4. Why NFS? • Need to share files • Simplified administration • Applications • Cross platform • PC-NFS

  5. Progression NFS v2 • First Commercial shipment 1985 • 18 ops • File sizes limited to 32 bit • Slow writes • Arbitrary transfer limit • Lack of cache consistency

  6. Business Drivers NFS v3 • PC Explosion • 64 bit hardware • File size growth • data explosion • Application data needs • Movement from • mainframe to open systems • IT centers to desktop

  7. Progression NFS v3 • Protocol published 1993 • 22 ops • File size extended to 64 bit • Fast write • Increased transfer size • ACCESS over the wire (supports caching & ACLs)

  8. Business Driver NFS v4 • Internet • Need for cross platform support • Strong security • Designed for growth

  9. Current status • NFS v2 and v3 shipping with Solaris • All major platforms • Connectathon • Bakeoffs

  10. Open Source • Released TI-RPC via new Sun Open Source License • available at http://soldc.sun.com • License supported in Open Standards community • Positive press from: • InfoWorld • Linux Weekly • CNET News • Linux Today

  11. Recent Product Enhancements • NFS Logging shipped Solaris 8 • Forced unmount Solaris 8 • IPv6 support • Performance improvements

  12. Security • RPCSEC_GSSAPI • Kerberos • others • Compatibility testing

  13. WebNFS • Available for download • www.sun.com/webnfs/ • Prototypes working • IE5 plug in • Netscape plug in • Server shipped with the following versions of Solaris: 2.5.1, 2.6, 7 & 8

  14. Future business driversWhy NFS v4? • Internet pressures • B2B, B2C, P2P • Security requirement • Ability to respond to rapid changes

  15. Future • Continue working through the IETF process • Under the NFS v4 working group • File migration • replication

  16. Collaborative Development • Continue funding college (CITI) • Additional opportunities • Conformance test development • SPEC SFS to include NFS v4 • Client benchmark

  17. Reading list • NFS Illustrated, Brent Callaghan • Managing NFS and NIS, Hal Stern • White papers at www.nfsv4.org

  18. Reference • www.nfsv4.org • www.ietf.org • www.connectathon.org • www.sun.com/webnfs

  19. Summary • History of success • Continued leadership • Active • Vendor deployment • Working groups

  20. Q & A

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