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Date:      Sat, 18 Apr 1998 11:21:59 -0400
From:      Dan Swartzendruber <dswartz@druber.com>
To:        Jens Schweikhardt <schweikh@noc.dfn.de>
Cc:        stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: option NFS -- why would I want it?
Message-ID:  <3.0.5.32.19980418112159.00929940@mail.kersur.net>
In-Reply-To: <199804181457.QAA12277@obsidian.noc.dfn.de>

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At 04:57 PM 4/18/98 +0200, Jens Schweikhardt wrote:
>
>hello, world\n
>
>just out of curiosity: when I compile a kernel with option NFS the
>size increases by 250k (on an i486, 2.2.5R):
>
>-r-xr-xr-x  1 root  wheel   886718 Apr 16 14:25 kernel
>-r-xr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  1125987 Apr 16 13:14 kernel+NFS
>
>However, even without option NFS in the kernel, I can use all
>NFS stuff, like mounting nfs file systems, use the automounter
>and so on. The machine works both as nfs server and client.
>
>I do think that 'option NFS' is there for a reason. The only reason
>I can think of right now is that I need nfs in the kernel if the
>machine is diskless. Is there another catch?

Not that I know of.  You are binding NFS into the kernel.  If you don't
do this, any NFS operations will load the LKM for NFS transparently, so
as far I know, there's no compelling reason except diskless operation.




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