Hi Timo,
I just read about NFSv4 now being included in SuSE and Redhat Enterprise versions, and although I don't use it myself, wondered how this will impact Dovecot for those using it?
Will it make life easier? Or is it even supported currently?
Just curious... thanks...
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Best regards,
Charles
On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 08:27 -0500, Charles Marcus wrote:
Hi Timo,
I just read about NFSv4 now being included in SuSE and Redhat Enterprise versions, and although I don't use it myself, wondered how this will impact Dovecot for those using it?
Will it make life easier? Or is it even supported currently?
Since older NFS versions already work with Dovecot, I think NFSv4 can only make it work better. What I've read of NFSv4 it looks like its client cache can work better. But I haven't looked more than just a few "feature lists" of it so far.
Since NFS is an underlying subsystem, dovecot does not need anything (code wise) to "support" it. Basically, dovecot writes to the filesystem, regardless of where it is located. It really doesn't know about the underlying layer, be it NFS, ext3, jfs, iSCSI, etc.
In other words, in the most general sense, if the file to be read from or written to is on an NFSv2 or NFSv4 partition, dovecot really doesn't care. :)
However, the same *tuning* parameters are necessary when you are using an NFS file store.
And, in answer to your questions: o it is already supported (as described above) o NFSv4 boasts better performance and stability o it will probably have little impact on the dovecot user community, but better performance is always a good thing. ;)
-Rich
I just read about NFSv4 now being included in SuSE and Redhat Enterprise versions, and although I don't use it myself, wondered how this will impact Dovecot for those using it?
Will it make life easier? Or is it even supported currently?
Just curious... thanks...
And, in answer to your questions: o it is already supported (as described above) o NFSv4 boasts better performance and stability o it will probably have little impact on the dovecot user community, but better performance is always a good thing. ;)
Thanks for the answers...
My query was prompted mainly by the posts that I have seen on this list describing problems with using NFS - mainly file-locking, if memory serves correctly. So, I just wondered if the use of NFSv4 might make these issues 'go away'... ;)
Anyway, as I said, I was just curious. Thanks again for responding...
--
Best regards,
Charles
participants (3)
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Charles Marcus
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Rich West
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Timo Sirainen