Kris Kennaway wrote: > On Mon, Jan 14, 2002 at 08:39:33PM -0500, Dylan Carlson wrote: > > I know that work is already underway to incorporate this into the Linux > > kernel. I'm wondering if there are people within the FreeBSD project who are > > also working on this. > > > > Noteworthy features: firewall-friendly, secure, less network-intensive, does > > replication ... > > The reference implementation was being developed for Linux and > OpenBSD, last I heard. Shouldn't be too hard to port, in theory.
I sent comments to the working group, but didn't bother to follow whether or not they got in. My major comment was that all packets with timestamps in them should have the sending systems' current time, which would let the time be turned into a locally correct delta, applied to the current local clock, to get an absolute invariant delta time. One of the big problems with the original NFS implementations was that, lacking this approach, the clock synchronization requirements were rather tight. Now that FreeBSD has deemed it necessary to go to 32 bits of subsecond resolution, the synchronization issues are very much exacerbated. Does anyone know if the NFSv4 RFC that finally made it through has this feature, or if they blew it yet again with the time stuff? -- Terry To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message