Richard Freeman on 4 Sep 2009 09:25:33 -0700 |
JP Vossen wrote: > Now I'm finally getting my wife to try moving over to TB and FF on > Ubuntu, perhaps with some Picasa (yuck) and OpenOffice thrown in. How > can I most seamlessly connect her to her data from Ubuntu Hardy on her > laptop? (Yes, Hardy, I like LTS versions. But UbuntuOne sounds cool.) > I think you've hit on one of the biggest gaps I see in linux - networking support. The only really well-integrated networking option in linux is NFS and it is pretty lousy for a lot of reasons. I think that samba is probably your most practical option - to be honest samba is probably better than NFS for sharing data even between two linux systems under many scenarios. Of course, samba is lousy when it comes to permissions/symlinks/etc (unless of course you're talking about between windows machines). Another option that wasn't mentioned is openafs. In theory that filesystem offers everything that you're interested in (offline access (read-only), windows and linux drivers, etc). However, it is pretty complex to set up - I messed with it and ended up giving up. I really was interested in using it for my roaming windows profiles since transferring them across the network really slows login/logoug. If they were stored on openafs then they could be cached locally and the filesystem manages the cache so that data isn't retransmitted unless it really is stale. If anybody is feeling really daring it might be something worth looking at. There is a ton of documentation out there, but it is really old. It also requires delving into Kerberos. Not for the feint of heart. ___________________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group -- http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion -- http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
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