Building a Network File Server from The Ground Up

Faculty Mentor Information

Dale Hamilton, Barry Meyrs

Abstract

Data is useless unless you have a means of storing and accessing that data. Network Attached Storage (NAS) utilizing Network File System (NFS) is one of the main ways of storing data on a server and having it accessible from other servers and computers. In the process of building the system, the administrator needs to setup the server to work in tandem with other servers on the network. This is our experience in setting up a network file server on the Computer Science network at Northwest Nazarene University.

Comments

Poster #Th8

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS
 

Building a Network File Server from The Ground Up

Data is useless unless you have a means of storing and accessing that data. Network Attached Storage (NAS) utilizing Network File System (NFS) is one of the main ways of storing data on a server and having it accessible from other servers and computers. In the process of building the system, the administrator needs to setup the server to work in tandem with other servers on the network. This is our experience in setting up a network file server on the Computer Science network at Northwest Nazarene University.