On Wed, Nov 01, 2006 at 11:54:24PM +0100, Marc Balmer wrote: > stuartv wrote: > >I might have just about talked my boss into replacing our > >current WindowsNT (soon to be Win2003) primary file server > >with an OpenBSD server. Unfortunately, since most of our > >work is done using Access databases (and other Microsoft > >Office products) we will have to continue using Windows > >systems for our desktop systems (for now). This is a mix > >of Win98 and WinXP systems. The File server will have to > >act as a primary domain controller on a windows network > >handling logins and permissions for various shares around > >the network and share a couple network printers. I would > >also like to use an encrypted file system on which to store > >important data that needs to be protected (in case of theft > >etc). > > Your setup is easy to do with OpenBSD but the encrypted filesystem > OpenBSD does not offer. And it is not needed. Nobody will steal your > file server.
Actually, OpenBSD does offer encrypted filesystems - well, technically, svnd(4) is an encrypting block device, but that's close enough. > >This project is all part of my devious plan to gradually > >convert to an all (or at least mostly) OpenBSD environment > >here at work (psst... don't tell my boss). If this pans out, > >I think replacing our SQL server with MySQL on an OpenBSD box > >will be the next big conquest. :) > > Replacing any SQL server with MySQL is just plain stupid. Use > PostgreSQL, which unlike the crappy MySQL toy is a real database system. Depends on what you want to do. MySQL might not be a real SQL server, but it's damn fast at simple lookups. That said, I'll stick with PostgreSQL. Joachim