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January 2006

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Mailling list for Scientific Linux users worldwide <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 18 Jan 2006 04:50:57 +0800
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To: Stephan Wiesand <[log in to unmask]> cc: Connie Sieh <[log in to unmask]>
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Hi Stephan,

Thanks for the info.
I'm new to OpenAFS ... so if I only run AFS client, I can see all the
files shared by AFS servers around the world and asscess then just
as they are my local files ?
And if I create my own AFS cell, the whole world can see me too ?
That's COOL ... no more FTP server is required.
Does my understand is correct ?


Thanks
KC

>
> Running an AFS client is perfectly reasonable (these days) even if you
> don't have your own AFS cell. If nothing else, browsing /afs/openafs.org,
> or /afs/athena.mit.edu, or, say, /afs/hepix.org is fun, isn't it?
>
> In the default "dynroot" mode of the client, it doesn't matter much which
> cell you pick. You may even invent your own one (I'm running client that
> thinks it's part of the "st.home" cell right now). It starts making a
> difference when you try to obtain a token. For example, with klog. Your
> client will then try to talk to the kaserver of whatever it thinks is your
> home cell. Notice things like pam_krb5 (if you told authconfig to use
> kerberos authentication) may do this behind your back. Other than that,
> it merely affects what "fs wscell" will return. Which is, as I just
> noticed, a segfault at least if the cell is not recorded in the
> CellServDB and there are no AFSDB DNS records for it :-(
>
> NB the "AFS for Windows" folks translate "dynroot" into "freelance".
>
> Anyway: although it probably wouldn't do much harm, and it's impossible to
> keep anyone on the internet from configuring their AFS clients to think
> they're part of whatever AFS cell, most cells probably won't appreciate
> it unless you do have some business with them.
>
>    Stephan
>

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