IPSec support is mandatory at the stack level, add transport level support, and you can lock down even telnet traffic.
Where you'll see issues is the ISP and government interaction. If all the traffic is encrypted, then you have to rely on other forensic means to guess at what is in the packets.
Though this doesn't mean that all traffic WILL be encrypted, just that it CAN be encrypted.
The NetApp Filler's NFS does NOT work flawlessly, at least not with AIX. I had one in on a demo, and it works fine writing with many small files, but as you increase file size, there is a problem that pops up. I had the same problem using Linux as an NFS file server for AIX.
As you increase file size the filler takes longer and longer to return write acks. The more ram cache you have on the filler, the worse it gets. The exact symptoms have under linux, but on linux I can get to a command propmt, and type 'sync'. As soon the prompt returns, AIX is off and running again. This does not happen if I use Solaris. I did not have the time to try any xBSDs. NetApp was confused, IBM was confused.
Number one killer reason to move to IPv6?
IPSec support is mandatory at the stack level, add transport level support, and you can lock down even telnet traffic.
Where you'll see issues is the ISP and government interaction. If all the traffic is encrypted, then you have to rely on other forensic means to guess at what is in the packets.
Though this doesn't mean that all traffic WILL be encrypted, just that it CAN be encrypted.
The NetApp Filler's NFS does NOT work flawlessly, at least not with AIX. I had one in on a demo, and it works fine writing with many small files, but as you increase file size, there is a problem that pops up. I had the same problem using Linux as an NFS file server for AIX.
As you increase file size the filler takes longer and longer to return write acks. The more ram cache you have on the filler, the worse it gets. The exact symptoms have under linux, but on linux I can get to a command propmt, and type 'sync'. As soon the prompt returns, AIX is off and running again. This does not happen if I use Solaris. I did not have the time to try any xBSDs. NetApp was confused, IBM was confused.