Arla has been working on *BSD and Linux for several years. In the beginning of 1998, we had *BSD and Linux working. In May 1998, we had Linux 2.2 support working, long before Transarc. I am right now writing this on a Mac OS X Public Beta with Arla running.
Arla has been working on *BSD and Linux for several years. In the beginning of 1998, we had *BSD and Linux working. In May 1998, we had Linux 2.2 support working, long before Transarc. I am right now writing this on a Mac OS X Public Beta with Arla running.
We mainly develop arla on FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Linux, Mac OS X and Solaris.
Yes, milko is not for production use yet. Those wanting to see a server are welcome to help us, though :-)
The transition to IPv6 will not happen over-night. Backbone routers will continue to run IPv4 in parallel, and networks will slowly migrate.
Why should the interchange points be involved in IPv4/IPv6 issues? At least the Stockholm D-GIX is only a link-level interchange.
There is a free implementation of AFS on http://www.stacken.kth.se/projekt/arla/
Why do you reject AFS? If you don't like that Transarc's version isn't free, why don't you get a free AFS?
And arla provides an AFS client for free.
No, you don't. Not if you compile the module yourself. Try arla, the free AFS client.