you say you're going to run an NFS server, this is the thing that's doing the heavy lifting for you. And speaking of heavy lifting, Slackware does so much heavy lifting for you. This is the kind of thing that just really kind of gets overlooked in Slackware sometimes, I think. Just the fact that on Slackware there are so many things on Slackware that you just already have either 100% or 95% configured. It's just already there. It's so nice. It is just so nice. So NFS, and other Linux distributions provide the same service. I'm not saying Slackware is the only one. I'm just saying it is really nice on Slackware how these things are packaged up and practically ready for you to go. And frankly, NFS would be ready for you out of the box on Slackware. But for the fact that you have to tell it, by nature of the configuration file of NFS, you have some decisions to make. And Slackware is not going to make those decisions for you because they're potentially pretty major. So, I mean, there's a (29/55)
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