Adaptec 5325301507 Administration Guide - Page 50

Apple Networking Configuration, Support for NFS

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Apple Networking Configuration Support for NFS Consider the following technical information when configuring access for your NFS clients. Supported Protocols SnapServers support these versions of the NFS protocol: Protocol NFS Mount Lockd Version 2.0, 3.0, 4.0* 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 1.0, 4.0 Source RFC 1094, RFC 1813, RFC 3530 RFC 1094 Appendix A, RFC 1813, RFC 3530 RFC 1094, RFC1813, RFC 3530 * NFS v4 ACLs are not supported. Supported NFS Clients SnapServers have been tested with these UNIX-based networking clients: • Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 3.x, 4.x • Red Hat Fedora 4.x, 5.x, 6.x, 7.x, 8.x, 9.x • HP-UX 11, AIX 5.3 • Sun Solaris 9, 10 • SuSE Pro 9, 10 • SuSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) 8.x, 9.x, 10.x Note After enabling NFS v4 with Kerberos security, read-write host entries for gss/krb5, gss/krb5i, and gss/krb5p are automatically added to the NFS access entries for each NFS-enabled share. Apple Networking Configuration Apple File Protocol (AFP) settings are configured on the Network > Apple screen of the Administration Tool. The default settings provide access to AFP clients over an AppleTalk or TCP/IP network. MacOS clients connecting over AFP can log in to the server either as local users on the SnapServer or as Windows NT or Active Directory domain users (if the server belongs to a domain). For more granular control over client access for MacOS users who do not belong to a recognized Windows domain, create local user accounts. Note MacOS X users can also connect to the SnapServer using Windows networking (SMB). See "Connecting a MacOS Client Using SMB" on page 32. 34 SnapServer Administrator Guide

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Apple Networking Configuration
34
SnapServer Administrator Guide
Support for NFS
Consider the following technical information when configuring access for your NFS
clients.
Supported Protocols
SnapServers support these versions of the NFS protocol:
* NFS v4 ACLs are not supported.
Supported NFS Clients
SnapServers have been tested with these UNIX-based networking clients:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 3.x, 4.x
Red Hat Fedora 4.x, 5.x, 6.x, 7.x, 8.x, 9.x
HP-UX 11, AIX 5.3
Sun Solaris 9, 10
SuSE Pro 9, 10
SuSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) 8.x,
9.x, 10.x
Note
After enabling NFS v4 with Kerberos security, read-write host entries for
gss/krb5
,
gss/krb5i
, and
gss/krb5p
are automatically added to the NFS access
entries for each NFS-enabled share.
Apple Networking Configuration
Apple File Protocol (AFP) settings are configured on the
Network > Apple
screen of
the Administration Tool. The default settings provide access to AFP clients over an
AppleTalk or TCP/IP network. MacOS clients connecting over AFP can log in to the
server either as local users on the SnapServer or as Windows NT or Active
Directory domain users (if the server belongs to a domain). For more granular
control over client access for MacOS users who do not belong to a recognized
Windows domain, create local user accounts.
Note
MacOS X users can also connect to the SnapServer using Windows
networking (SMB). See “Connecting a MacOS Client Using SMB” on page 32.
Protocol
Version
Source
NFS
2.0, 3.0, 4.0*
RFC 1094, RFC 1813, RFC 3530
Mount
1.0, 2.0, 3.0
RFC 1094 Appendix A, RFC 1813, RFC 3530
Lockd
1.0, 4.0
RFC 1094, RFC1813, RFC 3530