Hi everyone !
Right now I can’t decide wich one is the most versatile and fit my personal needs, so I’m looking into your personal experience with each one of them, if you mind sharing your experience.
It’s mostly for secure shared volumes containing ebooks and media storage/files on my home network. Adding some security into the mix even tough I actually don’t need it (mostly for learning process).
More precisely how difficult is the NFS configuration with kerberos? Is it actually useful? Never used kerberos and have no idea how it works, so it’s a very much new tech on my side.
I would really apreciate some indepth personal experience and why you would considere one over another !
Thank you !
I ran SSHFS for a while maybe half a year ago? I quite liked it cause we obviously already use SSH so setup was quick and easy, performance was good too. Then I learnt it’s no longer maintained so switched to NFS.
NFS is good, if you aren’t accessing from Windows I would go for that. Setup is pretty simple too, just change
/etc/exports
and a few permissions or ownerships (after installing the package obviously) then start the systemd service.Can’t comment on Kerberos, but considering NFS popularity I can’t imagine it being difficult.
How do I set permissions up with NFS? Do I have to have the same uids and gids on both server and clients?
In my experience, just making sure the directory you’re sharing is owned by
nobody:nogroup
is enough.sudo chown -R nobody:nogroup /path/to/nfs
That’s making it public, isn’t it?
I think so.
I think that’s what the kerberos is there to solve. I’ve heard that it isn’t that bad to set up. I haven’t tried and just stuck with SMB.
Yeah, I just wanted to have something mounted at boot on my Linux box from my NAS. Looks like it’s possible with SMB, I just need to figure out how to match the users on my machine with the ones on my server.
Ohhh wasn’t aware of that information ! Thank you.