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Date:      Fri, 5 Mar 1999 14:44:09 -0500 (EST)
From:      "Crist J. Clark" <cjc@cc942873-a.ewndsr1.nj.home.com>
To:        solca@fisicc-ufm.edu (Otto E. Solares)
Cc:        jktheowl@bga.com, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: NFS & NIS Problems
Message-ID:  <199903051944.OAA14210@cc942873-a.ewndsr1.nj.home.com>
In-Reply-To: <36E0241E.828CDBB0@fisicc-ufm.edu> from "Otto E. Solares" at "Mar 5, 99 12:36:14 pm"

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Otto E. Solares wrote,
> We have only a master server "zeus.adm.fisicc-ufm.edu",
> no slaves, one NIS domain "olympia.fisicc" and all clients
  ^^^^^^^^^
> are in time synch with zeus.
> 
> The clients used to be in the same network with the
> server (192.168.1.0) but that was when we was setting up
> the clients 1 by 1 so we have no chance to see if has the
> same problems, now each lab contains like 40 clients, we have
> 4 labs (lab1: 192.168.2.0 lab2: 192.168.3.0 lab3:192.168.4.0
> and lab4: 192.168.5.0) The clients are almost 95% the day
> in windows and a few days we have like 60 in FreeBSD
> (student projects), very tipically it hangs in X with the user
> logged in and display a message like RPC time out.

I think this is your problem. NIS is intended to be run over a
LAN (it uses broadcast UDP messages). Client-server communications
start to get really funky on a WAN. The most straight forward way to
fix this is to run a slave server on each LAN.

Keeping up a client-server relationship over a WAN, in my personal
experience, requires a bit of Deep NIS Magic. Of course, I was mixing
OSs as well which compounded my problems.

-- 
Crist J. Clark                           cjclark@home.com


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