DSM Review, NFS, AFS: Difference between revisions
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== Goals of NFS and AFS== | == Goals of NFS and AFS== | ||
===NFS=== | ===NFS=== | ||
* Remote access like local access | * Remote access like local access | ||
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* Scale to 5000 - 10000 hosts | * Scale to 5000 - 10000 hosts | ||
* Portability (POSIX) | * Portability (POSIX) | ||
== Differences == | |||
===NFS=== | |||
# NFS does a system call for every read/write | |||
# NFS can operate with diskless clients | |||
===AFS=== | |||
# AFS does a system call only on retrieving and storing a file | |||
# AFS assumes clients have a hard disk |
Revision as of 19:55, 13 February 2008
Readings
- Jelica Protic et al., "Distributed Shared Memory: Concepts and Systems" (1996)
This paper reviews work in the area of distributed shared memory.
- Russel Sandberg et al., "Design and Implementation of the Sun Network Filesystem" (1985)
This is the original NFS paper.
- John H. Howard et al., "Scale and Performance in a Distributed File System" (1988)
This paper describes AFS and compares it to NFS.
Questions
For the Protic paper, consider the following:
- What were the major problems addressed in DSM research following Kai Li's dissertation?
- Did these advances change the scope of environments and problems appropriate for DSM?
- Why aren't DSM systems commonly in use today?
For the NFS and AFS papers, consider these questions:
- What were the key design goals of NFS and AFS?
- How well did they achieve their goals?
- What are their limitations?
- How suitable are NFS and AFS in modern small networks? Enterprise networks? Internet-scale applications? Why?
Goals of NFS and AFS
NFS
- Remote access like local access
- Scale to ~50 clients
- Portability
- Lightweight
AFS
- Seamless
- Scale to 5000 - 10000 hosts
- Portability (POSIX)
Differences
NFS
- NFS does a system call for every read/write
- NFS can operate with diskless clients
AFS
- AFS does a system call only on retrieving and storing a file
- AFS assumes clients have a hard disk