Moving from smbfs to cifs
Peter Wemm
peter at wemm.org
Mon Jun 9 20:19:36 UTC 2008
On Mon, Jun 9, 2008 at 11:02 AM, Garrett Cooper <yanefbsd at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello all,
> I was wondering if there's been any serious thought put into
> migrating from smbfs (unmaintained project in kernel / userland since
> 2001) to cifs (currently supported Samba project). This is the
> mount_smbfs user tool that's available in userland.
> There are some related questions about this and observations
> that I've made:
> Pros:
> 1. cifs is the successor to smbfs, which is good from a
> performance and feature enhancement end.
> 2. It's supported, which means that any bugs in the code can
> be filed upstream and we'll be helped. This is an important point as I
> appear to be hard locking up my system with some kind of non-MPSAFE
> issue at kernel level on a very fresh copy of -CURRENT.
>
> Cons:
> 1. cifs is currently Linux centric (it currently uses quite a
> few Linux calls and references the Linux module code base); that will
> need to be fixed.
> 2. It's GPL v2 licensed, which means that more GPL code will
> "infect" the kernel, whereas smbfs was in a more BSD-like license
> format.
>
> So, my question would be "do the pros outweigh the cons for
> attempting to migrate from smbfs to cifs in the kernel?"
> Thanks,
> -Garrett
I was surprised to discover that smbfs works as well as it does. I
really was expecting a whole pile of panics, lockups etc, but for my
usage level, it seems to just work. On my smp desktop:
peter at overcee[1:16pm]~/fbp4/hammer/sys/dev/twa-193> mount | grep smbfs | wc -l
5
peter at overcee[1:17pm]~/fbp4/hammer/sys/dev/twa-194> uptime
1:17PM up 49 days, 21:46, 6 users, load averages: 0.29, 0.26, 0.17
Maybe it'll all catch fire tomorrow..
--
Peter Wemm - peter at wemm.org; peter at FreeBSD.org; peter at yahoo-inc.com
"All of this is for nothing if we don't go to the stars" - JMS/B5
"If Java had true garbage collection, most programs would delete
themselves upon execution." -- Robert Sewell
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