Help making A3000UX a server
Travis Bissett
tbissett at nstar.rn.com
Wed Feb 27 12:01:42 AEST 1991
jason at cbmami.UUCP (Jason Goldberg) writes:
> I have an A3000UX, I have ethernet cards in the A3000UX as well as in a
> A3000, and 2 A2500/030's, I want to create a network. I understand I need
> to make the A3000UX a server, but the docs are very unclear on what I need
> to do to accomplish this. Does anyone have any suggestions?
>
> Thanks,
>
First, let me say that my advice is probably worth somewhat less than oyu're
paying for it. I am NOT a networking expert. Having said that let me offer
you my advice :-) Look for clues in the docs with your A3000/ux on what if
anything you have to mark or change in order to export a file system. You
may not have to chang anything. Next, look to make sure that you have
"daemons" -- utility files that run in their own process, are started as
part of the startup process, and exist to service incoming requests for
specific services. For some examples, tcp/ip (the DoD protocols upon which
NFS works) defines some basic services: rlogin, rsh, rcp, telent, ftp, etc.
For each of these CLIENT utilities there has to be a matching SERVER daemon
utility. In ancient Greek mythology, daemons were little spirits that acted
as liasons between gods and mortals. So, here I am on my Amiga PC and I want
to rlogin to another machine which will assume the role of the server. My
rlogin command ("rlogin bigstuff") looks into the hosts file (usually
/etc/hosts) to find the internet address assigned (by you?) to the name
"bigstuff". It then tries to establish the connection to that address and
hopefully bigstuff's rlogind (it's equivalent daemon) answers back with a
login. Ditto for ftp or rcp -- they each get serviced by ftpd or rcpd. Now
the harder part -- mounting a remotely exported file system. Your clinet
will, after the right drivers and things get running, issue a command like
"net use K: //bigstuff/myfile" ... syntax and punctuation may vary. But the
idea is that bigstuff has a file that tells it you have the right ot mount a
drive in a filesystem. My example is from PC-NFS mounting a unix file area
as an MS-DOS drive device. On Amiga it may be NET: not K: and it might even
be MOUNT not NET USE. Sorry, hate to say this, but RTFM :-( BTW, where is
that FM anyway.... :-) This si really too big to tackle in a single message,
but maybe a combined influx of mail will let a picture emerge for you.
Finding where to start is toughest -- you can't ask specific questions such
as why don't this here thing work like the book says? Your priority ought to
be to get that book. Check B. Daltons' for an NFS (Unix) book if you have
to. And, may the Schwartz be with you!
Travis
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