| Title: | DIGITAL UNIX (FORMERLY KNOWN AS DEC OSF/1) |
| Notice: | Welcome to the Digital UNIX Conference |
| Moderator: | SMURF::DENHAM |
| Created: | Thu Mar 16 1995 |
| Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 10068 |
| Total number of notes: | 35879 |
Hi I cross posted this to the NFS conference as well...
A customer of ours asked the following questions - I'm not familar
with NFS 3.0, but Intergraph's new DiskAccess software (it's a
replacement for a PC-NFS client software which runs on Intel and
Alpha NT systems) exhibits the following problem with an
Alphaserver 4000.
Any help would be appreciated
todd///
>
>Quick question, Does a DEC APLHAServer 4000 with DIGITAL UNIX 4.0 support
>version 3 NFS.
>
>If so, Why can't a DEC Alpha client running DISKAcess mount a the server
>and write faster than 8K? According to Intergraph I should be able to
>write as fast as 64K?
>
>
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9577.1 | KITCHE::schott | Eric R. Schott USG Product Management | Tue Apr 22 1997 19:57 | 34 | |
> > Hi I cross posted this to the NFS conference as well... > > A customer of ours asked the following questions - I'm not familar > with NFS 3.0, but Intergraph's new DiskAccess software (it's a > replacement for a PC-NFS client software which runs on Intel and > Alpha NT systems) exhibits the following problem with an > Alphaserver 4000. > > Any help would be appreciated > > todd/// > >> >>Quick question, Does a DEC APLHAServer 4000 with DIGITAL UNIX 4.0 support >>version 3 NFS. >> >>If so, Why can't a DEC Alpha client running DISKAcess mount a the server >>and write faster than 8K? According to Intergraph I should be able to >>write as fast as 64K? >> My guess is the question has been garbled...I guess they are asking do we support single operation write sizes larger than 8KB between client and server... I think it is on our list the raise this in a future release. I think they should be able to write at many MB/sec, depending on their network ... >> > | |||||