[comp.dcom.lans] pclans RFC

peiffer@umn-cs.cs.umn.edu (Tim J. Peiffer) (07/02/88)

	I have a rather unique request to make of the lan community.  I am
looking for information from users and system adminstrators about combined
apple/ibm/*nix networks.  My only experience deals with IBM netbios and its
network structure.  I am interested in combining IBM/apple and possibly
unix for it's nfs capability.  What are the various networks that are available
to combine these; are Tops, Paradox, Novell, and Sun PCNFS the only ones to
really consider?  How do these networks differ in concept and how do they 
appear to the user?  How are they from an administrators point of view?

	I need this information so that I may make an informed recommendation
to another department (users) regarding a planned pc network.  If the response
to this is not something that needs to be discussed on a net level, please
email all recommendations/flames.

Tim Peiffer
Comp Sci Systems Group
University of Minnesota, Mpls MN
peiffer@umn-cs.cs.umn.edu
(ding a ling net 612-625-0876)

sob@cortex.neuro.bcm.tmc.edu (Stan Barber) (07/22/88)

In article <6064@umn-cs.cs.umn.edu> peiffer@umn-cs.cs.umn.edu (Tim J. Peiffer) writes:
>What are the various networks that are available
>to combine these; are Tops, Paradox, Novell, and Sun PCNFS the only ones to
>really consider?  How do these networks differ in concept and how do they 
>appear to the user?  How are they from an administrators point of view?

Paradox is NOT a network. It is a PC-database product that allows
con-current database access (after a fashion) from multiple PCs. It will
work on top of PC/NFS and TOPS. I don't know, but assume that it will work
on top of Novell and 3+ as well. If you are looking for a TCP/IP-based
solution, only PC/NFS (of the ones you mentioned) will do. TOPS and Novell
are both based on vendor-specific protocols. Novell has available a
TCP/IP gateway that allows ftp and telnet (no SMTP, though). TOPS has
a SUN implementation that allows a SUN to "bridge the gap", but it
not a gateway.

Novell has "accounts" that an administrator has to set up. TOPS
publishes directories that certain other TOPS users can mount ( it
is probably the most relaxed of the ones you mentioned). It does 
prompt for passwords and such in the SUN version. PC/NFS uses
all the standard TCP/IP-type administrative details to make things
happen plus a password authentication on the server before remote
disks can be mounted (if you set it up that way). PC/NFS requires
a NFS SERVER to work (such as a SUN). Novell requires a dedicated
PC server. All Tops clients cans be servers as well.

Stan Barber, Baylor College of Medicine
sob@tmc.edu
Stan	     uucp:{shell,rice,seismo}!soma!sob        Opinions expressed here
Olan         domain:sob@rice.edu or sob@soma.bcm.tmc.edu   are ONLY mine &
Barber       CIS:71565,623   BBS:(713)790-9004               noone else's.