Managing NFS and NIS

A modern computer system that's not part of a network is even more of an anomaly today than it was when we published the first edition of this book in 1991. But however widespread networks have become, managing a network and getting it to perform well can still be a problem. Managing NFS and NI...

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Những tác giả chính: Eisler, Mike, Labiaga, Ricardo, Stern, Hal
Định dạng: Sách
Ngôn ngữ:English
Được phát hành: O'Reilly 2011
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Truy cập trực tuyến:https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/26533
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spelling oai:scholar.dlu.edu.vn:DLU123456789-265332012-03-03T05:17:38Z Managing NFS and NIS Eisler, Mike Labiaga, Ricardo Stern, Hal Tin học A modern computer system that's not part of a network is even more of an anomaly today than it was when we published the first edition of this book in 1991. But however widespread networks have become, managing a network and getting it to perform well can still be a problem. Managing NFS and NIS, in a new edition based on Solaris 8, is a guide to two tools that are absolutely essential to distributed computing environments: the Network Filesystem (NFS) and the Network Information System (formerly called the "yellow pages" or YP). The Network Filesystem, developed by Sun Microsystems, is fundamental to most Unix networks. It lets systems ranging from PCs and Unix workstations to large mainframes access each other's files transparently, and is the standard method for sharing files between different computer systems. As popular as NFS is, it's a "black box" for most users and administrators. Updated for NFS Version 3, Managing NFS and NIS offers detailed access to what's inside, including: How to plan, set up, and debug an NFS network Using the NFS automounter Diskless workstations PC/NFS A new transport protocol for NFS (TCP/IP) New security options (IPSec and Kerberos V5) Diagnostic tools and utilities NFS client and server tuning NFS isn't really complete without its companion, NIS, a distributed database service for managing the most important administrative files, such as the passwd file and the hosts file. NIS centralizes administration of commonly replicated files, allowing a single change to the database rather than requiring changes on every system on the network. 2011-11-17T07:21:05Z 2011-11-17T07:21:05Z 2001 Book https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/26533 en application/pdf O'Reilly
institution Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt
collection Thư viện số
language English
topic Tin học
spellingShingle Tin học
Eisler, Mike
Labiaga, Ricardo
Stern, Hal
Managing NFS and NIS
description A modern computer system that's not part of a network is even more of an anomaly today than it was when we published the first edition of this book in 1991. But however widespread networks have become, managing a network and getting it to perform well can still be a problem. Managing NFS and NIS, in a new edition based on Solaris 8, is a guide to two tools that are absolutely essential to distributed computing environments: the Network Filesystem (NFS) and the Network Information System (formerly called the "yellow pages" or YP). The Network Filesystem, developed by Sun Microsystems, is fundamental to most Unix networks. It lets systems ranging from PCs and Unix workstations to large mainframes access each other's files transparently, and is the standard method for sharing files between different computer systems. As popular as NFS is, it's a "black box" for most users and administrators. Updated for NFS Version 3, Managing NFS and NIS offers detailed access to what's inside, including: How to plan, set up, and debug an NFS network Using the NFS automounter Diskless workstations PC/NFS A new transport protocol for NFS (TCP/IP) New security options (IPSec and Kerberos V5) Diagnostic tools and utilities NFS client and server tuning NFS isn't really complete without its companion, NIS, a distributed database service for managing the most important administrative files, such as the passwd file and the hosts file. NIS centralizes administration of commonly replicated files, allowing a single change to the database rather than requiring changes on every system on the network.
format Book
author Eisler, Mike
Labiaga, Ricardo
Stern, Hal
author_facet Eisler, Mike
Labiaga, Ricardo
Stern, Hal
author_sort Eisler, Mike
title Managing NFS and NIS
title_short Managing NFS and NIS
title_full Managing NFS and NIS
title_fullStr Managing NFS and NIS
title_full_unstemmed Managing NFS and NIS
title_sort managing nfs and nis
publisher O'Reilly
publishDate 2011
url https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/26533
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