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Network File System (NFS) is a distributed file system protocol originally developed by Sun Microsystems (Sun) in 1984, [1] allowing a user on a client computer to access files over a computer network much like local storage is accessed.
With police pursuits reintegrated into the game, Hot Pursuit ' s gameplay now consists of two categories. The first encompasses standard racing, as it has been in its predecessors, The Need for Speed and Need for Speed II, in which the player is allowed to race against one (including split-screen races) or seven other racers in normal circuit racers, knockouts, or tournaments (which allow the ...
StarWind develops "standards-based storage virtualization and management software that will run on any x86 platform". [11] Its software defined storage software supports building iSCSI, [12] iSER, NVM Express over Fabrics (), [13] and NFSv3/v4 and SMB3 NAS using commodity hardware.
Need for Speed (NFS) is a racing game franchise published by Electronic Arts and currently developed by Criterion Games (the developers of the Burnout series). [1] Most entries in the series are generally arcade racing games centered around illegal street racing, and tasks players to complete various types of races, while evading the local law enforcement in police pursuits.
The latest versions of ONTAP 9 support NFSv2, NFSv3, NFSv4 (4.0 and 4.1) and pNFS. Starting with ONTAP 9.5, 4-byte UTF-8 sequences, for characters outside the Basic Multilingual Plane , are supported in names for files and directories.
Tomato is a family of community-developed, custom firmware for consumer-grade computer networking routers and gateways powered by Broadcom chipsets.The firmware has been continually forked and modded by multiple individuals and organizations, with the most up-to-date fork provided by the FreshTomato project.
The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of widely used and currently available operating system kernels. Please see the individual products' articles for further information.
4.0-RELEASE appeared in March 2000 [4] and the last 4-STABLE branch release was 4.11 in January 2005 supported until 31 January 2007. [5] FreeBSD 4 was lauded for its stability, was a favorite operating system for ISPs and web hosting providers during the first dot-com bubble, [dubious – discuss] and is widely regarded [by whom?] as one of the most stable and high-performance operating ...