File Services
17
177
17
File Services
The file services in Open Enterprise Server 2 let you provide Web-based and network-based file
services to your network users.
This section contains the following information:
Section 17.1, “Overview of File Services,” on page 177
Section 17.2, “Planning for File Services,” on page 187
Section 17.3, “Coexistence and Migration of File Services,” on page 191
Section 17.4, “Aligning NCP and POSIX File Access Rights,” on page 192
Section 17.5, “Novell FTP (Pure-FTPd) and OES 2,” on page 196
Section 17.6, “NCP Implementation and Maintenance,” on page 202
Section 17.7, “NetStorage Implementation and Maintenance,” on page 203
Section 17.8, “Novell AFP Implementation and Maintenance,” on page 205
Section 17.9, “Novell CIFS Implementation and Maintenance,” on page 206
Section 17.10, “Novell iFolder 3.8 Implementation and Maintenance,” on page 206
Section 17.11, “Samba Implementation and Maintenance,” on page 207
17.1 Overview of File Services
The file service components in OES include the following:
FTP Services (page 178)
: Lets users securely transfer files to and from OES 2 servers.
NetWare Core Protocol (page 178)
: Provides NetWare Core Protocol (NCP) access to NCP
volumes (including NSS volumes) that you define on OES 2 server partitions.
NetStorage (page 179)
: Provides network and Web access to various file services through
common file service protocols, such as CIFS.
The NetStorage server doesn’t actually store files and folders. Rather, it provides access to
other file services that support the native TCP/IP protocol.
Novell AFP (page 182)
: Provides native Macintosh access to files stored on an NSS volume on
an OES 2 server.
Novell CIFS (page 183)
: Provides native Windows (CIFS and HTTP-WebDAV) access to files
stored on an NSS volume on an OES 2 server.
Novell iFolder 3.8 (page 184)
: Provides a Web-based and network-based repository (Novell
iFolder server) that stores master copies of locally accessible files on the OES 2 server.
Novell Samba (page 186)
: Provides Windows (CIFS and HTTP-WebDAV) access to files
stored on an OES 2 server’s file system.
The file service components in OES are generally compatible. However you cannot run Novell
Samba on the same OES 2 server as Novell AFP, Novell CIFS, or Domain Services for Windows,
which is not reviewed as a file service, but does include an alternative Samba file service.
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