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Date:      Mon, 9 Jun 2008 11:02:46 -0700
From:      "Garrett Cooper" <yanefbsd@gmail.com>
To:        current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Moving from smbfs to cifs
Message-ID:  <7d6fde3d0806091102k62637099qbaa73ca4d38ff64c@mail.gmail.com>

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Hello all,
        I was wondering if there's been any serious thought put into
migrating from smbfs (unmaintained project in kernel / userland since
2001) to cifs (currently supported Samba project). This is the
mount_smbfs user tool that's available in userland.
        There are some related questions about this and observations
that I've made:
Pros:
        1. cifs is the successor to smbfs, which is good from a
performance and feature enhancement end.
        2. It's supported, which means that any bugs in the code can
be filed upstream and we'll be helped. This is an important point as I
appear to be hard locking up my system with some kind of non-MPSAFE
issue at kernel level on a very fresh copy of -CURRENT.

Cons:
        1. cifs is currently Linux centric (it currently uses quite a
few Linux calls and references the Linux module code base); that will
need to be fixed.
        2. It's GPL v2 licensed, which means that more GPL code will
"infect" the kernel, whereas smbfs was in a more BSD-like license
format.

        So, my question would be "do the pros outweigh the cons for
attempting to migrate from smbfs to cifs in the kernel?"
Thanks,
-Garrett



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