Hi Brian,
A Filer should happily act as a downlevel volume in a DFS tree.
To quote Microsoft's overview of DFS (http://www.microsoft.com/NTServer/fileprint/exec/feature/DFSWP.asp):
"Downlevel Volumes Any volume that is Windows NT Server 4.0 or greater can host a Dfs volume and participate as an Inter-Dfs Link. All other volumes are considered downlevel. Downlevel volumes can be published in the Dfs volume, but can not themselves host Dfs or junction to other volumes. This includes Windows NT Workstation (all versions), Windows 95, Windows for Workgroups, and all non-Microsoft shares for which client redirectors are available."
Regards, Matt.
________________________________________________________________ Matthew Brookes mailto:mbrookes@netapp.com Systems Engineer http://www.netapp.com Network Appliance (Sales) Ltd. Tel: +353 1 4757052 18/19 Harcourt Street Fax: +353 1 4753943 Dublin 2, IRELAND Mob: +353 86 8575127
"NetApp takes UNIX workstations, Windows, database applications, and the Web, dumps them into an e-blender, and spits out smooth, compatible pools of data." Fortune
-----Original Message----- From: owner-dl-toasters@netapp.com [mailto:owner-dl-toasters@netapp.com]On Behalf Of Brian Tao Sent: 24 August 1999 16:08 To: toasters@mathworks.com Subject: Netapp CIFS as part of DFS tree?
I got this question from one of our NT guys... can a CIFS-enabled
Netapp participate in an NT DFS tree? From what I understand, NT's DFS looks and acts like UNIX-style directory mounts (i.e., instead of assigning a drive letter to a shared drive, the drive appears under an existing directory). -- Brian Tao (BT300, taob@risc.org) "Though this be madness, yet there is method in't"