Actually, that's what I did.

My NAS has two nic. And my two mail server front ends also have two nic. So
in total - 6 nic.


       ------
      | NAS  |
       ------
        1| |2
         | |
 ------  | |  ------
| MS1  | | | | MS2  |
 ------  | |  ------
 2| |1___| |__1| |2
  |              |
  |              |
  

Configured individual ip address for each of the nic at the NAS.
And then have the mail server front-ends each taking one nic to mount the
directoty. That, theoretically should double the network bandwidth, right?

NAS is using two 1Gig NIC cards. While the MS1/2 are using normal 100BaseT
NIC. Switch used is 10/100 type. I will be upgrading to Gig switch soon -
see if that solve the problem.

Regards,
/shaoming



-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Shupp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2003 10:38 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Sunday, September 21, 2003, at 07:07  PM, John Johnson wrote:

>  I would put a second NIC in the systems and put the NFS on it's own 
> Network that way it will not cause as many problems. Use a fake 
> 192.168.250 class for example on the second nics and have them on 
> there own equipment that should deal with the network traffic problem.
>
> -John

This is exactly what I always do, and probably why I haven't seen the 
problem described.  Besides, I wouldn't want nfs traffic going over a 
public network anyway in this context.

Regards,

Bill



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