Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 6 Mar 1998 13:56:47 -0500 (EST)
From:      Robert Watson <robert@cyrus.watson.org>
To:        afs@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Forwarded mail....
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.96.980306135639.8011C-100000@trojanhorse.pr.watson.org>

next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help



  Robert N Watson 

Carnegie Mellon University http://www.cmu.edu/
SafePort Network Services  http://www.safeport.com/
robert@fledge.watson.org   http://www.watson.org/~robert/

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 6 Mar 1998 06:47:12 -0800 (PST)
From: rvb@sicily.odyssey.cs.cmu.edu
To: freebsd-announce@FreeBSD.ORG

Subject: Announcing the Coda Distributed File System for BSD Systems
Message-ID: <yzs3eh024xk.fsf@sicily.odyssey.cs.cmu.edu>
Lines: 58
Sender: rvb@sicily.odyssey.cs.cmu.edu
Source-Info:  Sender is really rvb@sicily.odyssey.cs.cmu.edu

                Announcing the Availability of the
                        Coda Distributed
                           Filesystem
                              for
                         BSD Unix Systems

        Coda is a distributed file system like NFS and AFS.  It is
freely available, like NFS.  But it functions much like AFS in being a
"stateful" file system.  Coda and AFS cache files on your local
machine to improve performance.  But Coda goes a step further than AFS
by letting you access the cached files when there is no available
network, viz. disconnected laptops and network outages.  In Coda, both
the client and server are outside the kernel which makes them easier
to experiment with.

To get more information on Coda, I would like to refer people to
        http://www.coda.cs.cmu.edu
There is a wealth of documents, papers, theses there.  There is also a
good introduction to the Coda File System in
        http://www.coda.cs.cmu.edu/ljpaper/lj.html

Coda was originally developed as an academic prototype/testbed.  It is
being polished and rewritten where necessary.  Coda is a work in
progress and does have bugs.  It is, though, very usable.  Our
interest is in making Coda available to as many people as possible and
to have Coda evolve and flourish.

The bulk of the Coda file system code supports the Coda client
program, the Coda server program and the utilities needed by both.
All these programs are unix programs and can run equally well on any
Unix platform.  Our main development thrust is improving these
programs.  There is a small part of Coda that deals with the kernel to
file system interface.  This code is OS specific (but should not be
platform specific).

Coda is currently available for several OS's and platforms:
        Freebsd-2.2.5: i386
        linux 2.0: i386 & sparc
        linux 2.1: i386 & sparc
        NetBSD 1.2: i386
        NetBSD 1.3: i386
The relevant sources, binaries, and docs can be found in
        ftp://ftp.coda.cs.cmu.edu/pub/coda/ The most current Coda
release is 4.3.14.  We intend to come out with new releases often, not
daily.  We don't wish to slight any os/platform not mentioned above.
We are just limited in our resources as to what we can support
internally.  We will be happy to integrate OpenBSD support as well as
other OS support.  Also, adding platform support is relatively easy
and we can discuss this.  The only problem is that Coda has a light
weight process package.  It does some manipulations in assembler which
would have to be redone for a different platform.  (PS.  We are
working on a FreeBsd 3.0 release.)

There are several mailing lists @coda.cs.cmu.edu that discuss coda:
coda-announce and linux-coda.  We are going to revise linux-coda to be
OS neutral, since it is mainly Coda we want to discuss.  We appreciate
comments, feedback, bug reports, bug fixes, enhancements, etc.


This is the moderated mailing list freebsd-announce.
The list contains announcements of new FreeBSD capabilities,
important events and project milestones.
See also the FreeBSD Web pages at http://www.freebsd.org

To unsubscribe from freebsd-announce, send a mail to
majordomo@freebsd.org with the body

unsubscribe freebsd-announce


To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-announce" in the body of the message


To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-afs" in the body of the message



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?Pine.BSF.3.96.980306135639.8011C-100000>