Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!philabs!cmcl2!seismo!mcvax!ukc!reading!brueer!graham From: graham@ee.brunel.ac.uk (Graham Carpenter) Newsgroups: net.unix Subject: NFS client software for IBM PC Message-ID: <346@brueer.ee.brunel.ac.uk> Date: Thu, 3-Jul-86 07:40:25 EDT Article-I.D.: brueer.346 Posted: Thu Jul 3 07:40:25 1986 Date-Received: Sat, 5-Jul-86 06:36:37 EDT Organization: Dept of EE & E, Brunel University, Uxbridge, U.K. Lines: 50 Keywords: NFS IBM PC Sun I am posting this article here because I believe it will be of interest to a wider audience than just Sun and IBM PC users. We have just received from our Sun salesman a photocopy of a glossy brochure which describes a 'soon to be available' product. The product is NFS client software for the IBM PC. This allows you to take your PC with say one floppy drive, boot up the NFS, and use the filesystem of any Unix box running as an NFS server as if it were an MS-DOS hard disk on your PC. To quote from the glossy: ".... PC-NFS includes mechanisms that map NFS filenames to MS-DOS filenames. This name mapping allows MS-DOS utilities and applications to manipulate any files on an NFS server...... PC applications, batch files, system utilities can operate unchanged on NFS files, no new command language or programming interfaces are involved." PC-NFS also includes telnet so you can use the PC as a vt100 terminal, and also traps print calls and saves output for spooling to a network printer. The software is currently written to use Sun's own ethernet card for the PC. Since most US written software tends to get released over there before it reaches the UK, is anyone out there already using this product? If so, would someone please post a review of the software and give some idea of the cost of the software and hardware. Also I'd be interested to know if any of the ethernet card manufacturers are implementing the same software for their boards, and when we may expect to see the software available. In the same glossy brochure there is a description of a (less interesting to me) product called SUN IPC (Sun's Integrated Personal Computer). This is a co-processor board for the Sun which contains an 80287 processor 1.2 Megs of memory and the hardware to drive a floppy disk (the disk itself is optional), and allows you, amongst other things, to open an 'MS-DOS' window in Suntools and run MS-DOS applications which use the AT colour graphics adapter, the AT mono adapter or the Hercules mono adaptor. Any comments on this product? -- /------------------------------------------------------------------------------\ | Graham J Carpenter. | | | Dept of Electrical Engineering | ARPA: graham%ee.brunel.ac.uk@ucl-cs.arpa | | and Electronics | | | Brunel University | UUCP: ...!mcvax!ukc!ee.brunel.ac.uk!graham | | Uxbridge | | | UB8 3PH | VOICE: +44 895 74000 Ext 2849 | | UNITED KINGDOM | | \------------------------------------------------------------------------------/