Novell Open Enterprise Server 2 Manual De Usuario

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Overview of the NetWare Traditional File System
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Overview of the NetWare 
Traditional File System
The NetWare
®
 Traditional File System provides legacy storage and file system management for 
Novell
®
 Open Enterprise Server NetWare. 
The Novell Storage Services
TM
 File System (NSS) provides the primary system for storage and file 
management for NetWare. The NetWare operating system and its extensions are installed on an NSS 
pool and volume, named sys. For information, see “
” in the 
.
IMPORTANT: You can optionally use the Traditional volumes on the same server with your NSS 
volumes. However, if you are planning to implement Apple* File Protocol (AFP), Network File 
System (NFS), or Common Internet File System (CIFS) for this server, you must use the NSS file 
system, not the Traditional file system for your system volume and for any data volumes that use 
these protocols. For information, see 
To upgrade your Traditional volumes to NSS volumes, see “
” in th
This section discusses the following key concepts:
Š
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1.1  NetWare Traditional Volumes
Traditional volumes consist of a fixed amount of physical space on one or more server disks. A 
NetWare server supports up to 255 volumes of any combination of Traditional and NSS volumes, 
plus the system volume. 
During installation of OES NetWare, your system volume is automatically created as an NSS 
volume. After installation, you can use Novell Remote Manager for NetWare to create a new 
Traditional volume on any disk that has a NetWare partition. For information, see th
You subdivide Traditional volumes in two ways:
Š
Physically: Traditional volumes consist of physical partitions called volume segments. If a 
Traditional volume contains multiple volume segments, its member segments can reside on 
multiple server disks. For information about volume segments, see 
Š
Logically: You divide volumes into directories. In turn, the directories contain files and 
subdirectories created by network supervisors and users who have the appropriate rights. For 
information about directories and subdirectories, see