Features Features

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Features Features 2021/09/15 10:09 1/4 Features Features For detailed and important information, limitations and requirements about specific features make sure you read the Setup and Users Guide. XigmaNAS Base System XigmaNAS 11.3.0.4 Base OS = FreeBSD 11.3-RELEASE - Check this hardware compatibility list XigmaNAS 12.0.0.4 Base OS = FreeBSD 12.0-RELEASE - Check this hardware compatibility list Minimum Specs: OS disk: 2GB, RAM: 512MB for “Embedded” installs. OS disk: 4GB, RAM: 512MB for “Full” installs. Note! More than 2GB of RAM will give you better system performance! * ZFS prefetch needs 4GB of RAM Golden rule: The more RAM you add, the better it is! All XigmaNAS OS versions: Arch: x64 (x64= 64-bits, 32 bit is discontinued) & ARM (discontinued, try at your own risk) Full Web Management Interface (WebGUI). Network Protocols Active Directory PDC SMB/CIFS (Samba) AFP (Netatalk) NFS FTP (ProFTPD) SFTP (Secure File Transfer Protocol) TFTP (tftp-hpa) RSYNC (client/server) Unison SSH (including SCP and SFTP) iSCSI target Extra services Bittorent client (Transmission) UPnP server (FUPPES) iTunes/DAAP server (Firefly) Webserver (lighttpd) Network bandwitdh measure (Iperf3) XigmaNAS - https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/ Last update: 2019/10/08 05:30 features https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/doku.php?id=features Hard Drive / Volume management ZFS ZFS HAST (Highly Available Storage, hastd(8)) Software RAID 0,1,5 and mix (1+0,1+1, etc…) Disk encryption (using cryptographic accelerator card if present) Filesystem: UFS, Ext2/3, FAT, NTFS Partition: MBR and GPT iSCSI initiator Network CARP (Common Address Redundancy Protocol) 802.1q vlan tagging Wireless Link aggregation Bridge Wake On Lan Monitoring S.M.A.R.T (smartmontools) Email alert SNMP Syslog UPS (NUT) Software Used XigmaNAS is based upon/includes various free software packages, listed below. The authors of XigmaNAS would like to thank the authors of these software packages for their efforts. FreeBSD (http://www.freebsd.org) Copyright © 1995-2019 The FreeBSD Project. All rights reserved. geom raid5 FreeBSD GEOM RAID5 module Copyright © 2006-2009 Arne Woerner ([email protected]) & Copyright © 2010-2014 maintained by Lev Serebryakov ([email protected]). PHP (http://www.php.net). Copyright © 1999-2019 The PHP Group. All rights reserved. jQuery (http://jquery.com) Copyright © 2012 jQuery Foundation. Lighttpd (http://www.lighttpd.net) Copyright © 2004 by Jan Kneschke ([email protected]). All rights reserved. OpenSSH (http://www.openssh.com) Copyright © 1999-2009 OpenBSD. Samba (http://www.samba.org) Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation. Rsync (http://www.samba.org/rsync) Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation. ProFTPD - Highly configurable FTP server (http://www.proftpd.org) Copyright © 1999, 2000-2019 The ProFTPD Project. https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/ Printed on 2021/09/15 10:09 2021/09/15 10:09 3/4 Features tftp-hpa (http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/network/tftp) Copyright © 1999, 2000-2009 The tftp-hpa series is maintained by H. Peter Anvin. Netatalk (http://netatalk.sourceforge.net) Copyright © 1990,1996 Regents of The University of Michigan. Apple Bonjour (http://developer.apple.com/networking/bonjour) Apple Public Source License. Circular log support for FreeBSD syslogd (http://software.wwwi.com/syslogd)Copyright © 2001 Jeff Wheelhouse ([email protected]). ataidle (http://www.cran.org.uk/bruce/software/ataidle.php) Copyright © 2004-2005 Bruce Cran ([email protected]). All rights reserved. smartmontools (http://sourceforge.net/projects/smartmontools) Copyright © 2002-2012 Bruce Allen. iSCSI initiator (ftp://ftp.cs.huji.ac.il/users/danny/freebsd) Copyright © 2005-2011 Daniel Braniss ([email protected]). istgt - iSCSI target for FreeBSD (http://shell.peach.ne.jp/aoyama) Copyright © 2008-2015 Daisuke Aoyama ([email protected]). All rights reserved. FUPPES - Free UPnP Entertainment Service (http://fuppes.ulrich-voelkel.de) Copyright © 2005 - 2011 Ulrich Völkel ([email protected]). mt-daapd - Multithread daapd Apple iTunes server (http://www.fireflymediaserver.org) Copyright © 2003 Ron Pedde ([email protected]). NTFS-3G driver (http://www.ntfs-3g.org) from Szabolcs Szakacsits. Fuse - Filesystem in Userspace (http://fuse.sourceforge.net). e2fsprogs (http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net) Copyright © 1994-2006 Theodore Ts'o. All rights reserved. inadyn-mt - Simple Dynamic DNS client (http://sourceforge.net/projects/inadyn-mt) Inadyn Copyright © 2003-2004 Narcis Ilisei & Copyright © 2007 Bryan Hoover ([email protected]).All rights reserved. XMLStarlet Command Line XML Toolkit (http://xmlstar.sourceforge.net) Copyright © 2002 Mikhail Grushinskiy. All rights reserved. sipcalc (http://www.routemeister.net/projects/sipcalc) Copyright © 2003 Simon Ekstrand. All rights reserved. msmtp - An SMTP client with a sendmail compatible interface (http://msmtp.sourceforge.net) Copyright © 2008 Martin Lambers and others. cdialog - Display simple dialog boxes from shell scripts (http://invisible-island.net/dialog) Copyright © 2000-2006, 2007 Thomas E. Dickey. host - An utility to query DNS servers Rewritten by Eric Wassenaar, Nikhef-H, ([email protected]). Transmission - Transmission is a fast, easy, and free multi-platform BitTorrent client (http://www.transmissionbt.com) Copyright © 2008-2015 Transmission Project. All rights reserved. QuiXplorer - Web-based file-management (http://quixplorer.sourceforge.net) Copyright © Felix C. Stegerman. All rights reserved. pfSense: XigmaNAS use some pfSense code too (http://www.pfsense.com) Copyright © 2004, 2005, 2006 Scott Ullrich. All rights reserved. VMXNET3 NIC driver for FreeBSD (http://www.vmware.com) Copyright © 2010 VMware, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Open Virtual Machine Tools (http://sourceforge.net/projects/open-vm-tools/). VirtualBox Open Source Edition (OSE) (guest additions) (http://www.virtualbox.org/) LCDproc: A client/server suite for LCD devices (http://lcdproc.org) Copyright © 1998-2006 William Ferrell, Selene Scriven and many other contributors. All rights reserved. tmux: tmux is a terminal multiplexer. (http://sourceforge.net/projects/tmux/) Copyright © 2010 Nicholas Marriott. All Rights Reserved. iperf3: An tool to measure TCP and UDP bandwidth. (http://software.es.net/iperf/) Copyright © XigmaNAS - https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/ Last update: 2019/10/08 05:30 features https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/doku.php?id=features 2014 The Regents of the University of California. All Rights Reserved. Some of the software used for XigmaNAS are under the GNU General Public License (GPLv2, GPLv3), GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), Apple Public Source License and PHP License. From: https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/ - XigmaNAS Permanent link: https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/doku.php?id=features Last update: 2019/10/08 05:30 https://www.xigmanas.com/wiki/ Printed on 2021/09/15 10:09.
Recommended publications
  • IPS Signature Release Note V9.17.79
    SOPHOS IPS Signature Update Release Notes Version : 9.17.79 Release Date : 19th January 2020 IPS Signature Update Release Information Upgrade Applicable on IPS Signature Release Version 9.17.78 CR250i, CR300i, CR500i-4P, CR500i-6P, CR500i-8P, CR500ia, CR500ia-RP, CR500ia1F, CR500ia10F, CR750ia, CR750ia1F, CR750ia10F, CR1000i-11P, CR1000i-12P, CR1000ia, CR1000ia10F, CR1500i-11P, CR1500i-12P, CR1500ia, CR1500ia10F Sophos Appliance Models CR25iNG, CR25iNG-6P, CR35iNG, CR50iNG, CR100iNG, CR200iNG/XP, CR300iNG/XP, CR500iNG- XP, CR750iNG-XP, CR2500iNG, CR25wiNG, CR25wiNG-6P, CR35wiNG, CRiV1C, CRiV2C, CRiV4C, CRiV8C, CRiV12C, XG85 to XG450, SG105 to SG650 Upgrade Information Upgrade type: Automatic Compatibility Annotations: None Introduction The Release Note document for IPS Signature Database Version 9.17.79 includes support for the new signatures. The following sections describe the release in detail. New IPS Signatures The Sophos Intrusion Prevention System shields the network from known attacks by matching the network traffic against the signatures in the IPS Signature Database. These signatures are developed to significantly increase detection performance and reduce the false alarms. Report false positives at [email protected], along with the application details. January 2020 Page 2 of 245 IPS Signature Update This IPS Release includes Two Thousand, Seven Hundred and Sixty Two(2762) signatures to address One Thousand, Nine Hundred and Thirty Eight(1938) vulnerabilities. New signatures are added for the following vulnerabilities: Name CVE–ID
    [Show full text]
  • 1.0 Intro to Openbsd Information Pertaining to Any -Current Options, It Only Attempts to Track 2.0 Other Resources What Has Been Released on CD
    OpenBSD Frequently Asked Questions Frequently Asked Questions OpenBSD FAQ This FAQ is maintained with information pertaining to the 2.6 release of OpenBSD. Not all information presented here may be accurate for older Language: [en] releases of OpenBSD. Information for previous releases is available. You [es] [de] should check http://www.openbsd.com/errata.html for important updates. The FAQ follows release versions of OpenBSD. It will not have 1.0 Intro to OpenBSD information pertaining to any -current options, it only attempts to track 2.0 Other resources what has been released on CD. This is so there is no confusion as to 3.0 Obtaining OpenBSD which versions are being documented here. 4.0 Installation Guide This FAQ will take you through most critical steps to setting up your own 5.0 Kernel Configuration OpenBSD system. The addressed questions range from new to advanced 6.0 Networking Setup users. Hopefully you will find this FAQ useful. Downloadable versions of 7.0 Keyboard Controls the FAQ are available in text and PDF. These versions may not be as 8.0 General Questions up-to-date as the HTML versions available from this page. 9.0 Migrating from Linux ● Text Version 10.0 System Management ● PDF Version 11.0 Performance Tuning 12.0 For Advanced Users Any questions can be directed to: [email protected] 13.0 IPSec 2.6, 2.7 Recently updated or added FAQ's 14.0 Disk setup ● 6.1.1 - Identifying and Setting Up Your Network Interfaces - Changed to reflect the movment of some drivers to the dc* driver.
    [Show full text]
  • The Apple Ecosystem
    APPENDIX A The Apple Ecosystem There are a lot of applications used to manage Apple devices in one way or another. Additionally, here’s a list of tools, sorted alphabetically per category in order to remain vendor agnostic. Antivirus Solutions for scanning Macs for viruses and other malware. • AVG: Basic antivirus and spyware detection and remediation. • Avast: Centralized antivirus with a cloud console for tracking incidents and device status. • Avira: Antivirus and a browser extension. Avira Connect allows you to view device status online. • BitDefender: Antivirus and malware managed from a central console. • CarbonBlack: Antivirus and Application Control. • Cylance: Ransomware, advanced threats, fileless malware, and malicious documents in addition to standard antivirus. • Kaspersky: Antivirus with a centralized cloud dashboard to track device status. © Charles Edge and Rich Trouton 2020 707 C. Edge and R. Trouton, Apple Device Management, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-5388-5 APPENDIX A THe AppLe ECOSYSteM • Malware Bytes: Antivirus and malware managed from a central console. • McAfee Endpoint Security: Antivirus and advanced threat management with a centralized server to track devices. • Sophos: Antivirus and malware managed from a central console. • Symantec Mobile Device Management: Antivirus and malware managed from a central console. • Trend Micro Endpoint Security: Application whitelisting, antivirus, and ransomware protection in a centralized console. • Wandera: Malicious hot-spot monitoring, jailbreak detection, web gateway for mobile threat detection that integrates with common MDM solutions. Automation Tools Scripty tools used to automate management on the Mac • AutoCasperNBI: Automates the creation of NetBoot Images (read: NBI’s) for use with Casper Imaging. • AutoDMG: Takes a macOS installer (10.10 or newer) and builds a system image suitable for deployment with Imagr, DeployStudio, LANrev, Jamf Pro, and other asr or Apple Systems Restore-based imaging tools.
    [Show full text]
  • Linux Networking-HOWTO
    Linux Networking−HOWTO: Linux Networking−HOWTO: Table of Contents Linux Networking−HOWTO:............................................................................................................................1 Author: Joshua Drake poet@linuxports.com...........................................................................................1 1.Introduction...........................................................................................................................................1 2.Document History.................................................................................................................................1 3.How to use this HOWTO......................................................................................................................1 4.General Information about Linux Networking.....................................................................................1 5.Generic Network Configuration Information.......................................................................................1 6.Ethernet Information.............................................................................................................................2 7.IP Related Information..........................................................................................................................2 8.Advanced Networking with Kernel 2.2................................................................................................2 9.Using common PC hardware................................................................................................................2
    [Show full text]
  • Yocto Project Development Manual [ from the Yocto Project Website
    Scott Rifenbark, Intel Corporation <[email protected]> by Scott Rifenbark Copyright © 2010-2015 Linux Foundation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/uk/] as published by Creative Commons. Note For the latest version of this manual associated with this Yocto Project release, see the Yocto Project Development Manual [http://www.yoctoproject.org/docs/1.7.2/dev-manual/dev-manual.html] from the Yocto Project website. Table of Contents 1. The Yocto Project Development Manual .................................................................................. 1 1.1. Introduction ................................................................................................................. 1 1.2. What This Manual Provides .......................................................................................... 1 1.3. What this Manual Does Not Provide ............................................................................. 1 1.4. Other Information ........................................................................................................ 2 2. Getting Started with the Yocto Project .................................................................................... 4 2.1. Introducing the Yocto Project ....................................................................................... 4 2.2. Getting Set Up ...........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Sendmail Section 10.1
    TCP/IP Network Administration, 3rd Edition By Craig Hunt Publisher: O'Reilly Pub Date: April 2002 ISBN: 0-596-00297-1 Pages: 746 Table of • Slots: 1 Contents • Index • Reviews Reader • This complete hands-on guide to setting up and running a TCP/IP network Reviews starts with the fundamentals: what protocols do and how they work, how • Errata addresses and routing are used, and how to set up your network connection. The book also covers advanced routing protocols and provides tutorials on configuring important network services. The expanded third edition includes sections on Samba, Apache web server, network security, and much more. TCP/IP Network Administration, 3rd Edition By Craig Hunt Publisher: O'Reilly Pub Date: April 2002 ISBN: 0-596-00297-1 Pages: 746 Table of • Slots: 1 Contents • Index • Reviews Reader • Reviews • Errata Copyright Dedication Preface Audience Organization Unix Versions Conventions We'd Like to Hear from You Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Overview of TCP/IP Section 1.1. TCP/IP and the Internet Section 1.2. A Data Communications Model Section 1.3. TCP/IP Protocol Architecture Section 1.4. Network Access Layer Section 1.5. Internet Layer Section 1.6. Transport Layer Section 1.7. Application Layer Section 1.8. Summary Chapter 2. Delivering the Data Section 2.1. Addressing, Routing, and Multiplexing Section 2.2. The IP Address Section 2.3. Internet Routing Architecture Section 2.4. The Routing Table Section 2.5. Address Resolution Section 2.6. Protocols, Ports, and Sockets Section 2.7. Summary Chapter 3. Network Services Section 3.1. Names and Addresses Section 3.2.
    [Show full text]
  • Openbsd As a File Server
    OpenBSD as a File Server With Active Directory threatening the traditional SMB (Server Message Block) Windows file sharing and Appletalk/Chooser MacOS file sharing, open source Unix has an opening to become recognized as a file sharing platform that can cheaply and efficiently replace the more traditional operating systems. Although support for active directory is lacking, in the present interim where SMB, Chooser, and NFS (Network File System) still reign supreme, tools exist to make OpenBSD the perfect file server for cross-platform client networks and complex internetworks. As an example configuration for the various subsystems involved in this, let's look at my main OpenBSD server at work, which handles Appletalk, SMB, and NFS simultaneously and distributes files over a multi- platform internetwork. There are three repositories of data, which must all be accessible by Macintosh and Windows clients on the internal network: 1. /home/www (A local web-hosting directory on newboing, the server in question) 2. /deepthought (An NFS mount from deepthought, a remote server at a co-location facility) 3. /doca (An NFS mount from doc_a, a local NT server providing main internal file serving) Given this layout, there are three discernable steps involved in configuration. Step 1, configuring the mounts The NFS daemon on deepthought was configured to export only the /home directory and all its subsidiaries, and only to the correct IP address of newboing. This was done via an entry in /etc/exports reading: /home 202.56.38.123 Then it was mounted on newboing via the following command: mount -t nfs deepthought.domain.com.au:/home /deepthought Since there are problems mounting SMB filesystems under OpenBSD (it is possible, but the new smbfs- based smbmount is heavily Linux oriented), I chose to run PC-NFS on doc_a.
    [Show full text]
  • Freenas® 11.2-U3 User Guide
    FreeNAS® 11.2-U3 User Guide March 2019 Edition FreeNAS® is © 2011-2019 iXsystems FreeNAS® and the FreeNAS® logo are registered trademarks of iXsystems FreeBSD® is a registered trademark of the FreeBSD Foundation Written by users of the FreeNAS® network-attached storage operating system. Version 11.2 Copyright © 2011-2019 iXsystems (https://www.ixsystems.com/) CONTENTS Welcome .............................................................. 8 Typographic Conventions ..................................................... 10 1 Introduction 11 1.1 New Features in 11.2 .................................................... 11 1.1.1 RELEASE-U1 ..................................................... 14 1.1.2 U2 .......................................................... 14 1.1.3 U3 .......................................................... 15 1.2 Path and Name Lengths .................................................. 16 1.3 Hardware Recommendations ............................................... 17 1.3.1 RAM ......................................................... 17 1.3.2 The Operating System Device ........................................... 18 1.3.3 Storage Disks and Controllers ........................................... 18 1.3.4 Network Interfaces ................................................. 19 1.4 Getting Started with ZFS .................................................. 20 2 Installing and Upgrading 21 2.1 Getting FreeNAS® ...................................................... 21 2.2 Preparing the Media ...................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Oreilly Sendmail 4Th Edition.Pdf
    sendmail Other resources from O’Reilly Related titles sendmail 8.13 Companion DNS & Bind Cookbook™ sendmail Cookbook™ DNS and Bind TCP/IP Network Administration oreilly.com oreilly.com is more than a complete catalog of O’Reilly books. You’ll also find links to news, events, articles, weblogs, sample chapters, and code examples. oreillynet.com is the essential portal for developers interested in open and emerging technologies, including new platforms, pro- gramming languages, and operating systems. Conferences O’Reilly brings diverse innovators together to nurture the ideas that spark revolutionary industries. We specialize in document- ing the latest tools and systems, translating the innovator’s knowledge into useful skills for those in the trenches. Visit con- ferences.oreilly.com for our upcoming events. Safari Bookshelf (safari.oreilly.com) is the premier online refer- ence library for programmers and IT professionals. Conduct searches across more than 1,000 books. Subscribers can zero in on answers to time-critical questions in a matter of seconds. Read the books on your Bookshelf from cover to cover or sim- ply flip to the page you need. Try it today for free. FOURTH EDITION sendmail Bryan Costales, George Jansen, and Claus Aßmann with Gregory Neil Shapiro Beijing • Cambridge • Farnham • Köln • Paris • Sebastopol • Taipei • Tokyo sendmail, Fourth Edition by Bryan Costales, George Jansen, and Claus Aßmann with Gregory Neil Shapiro Copyright © 2008 Bryan Costales, George Jansen, and Claus Aßmann. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Published by O’Reilly Media, Inc., 1005 Gravenstein Highway North, Sebastopol, CA 95472. O’Reilly books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use.
    [Show full text]
  • Make Ubuntu a Perfect Mac File Server and Time Machine Volume [Update6]
    HowTo: Make Ubuntu A Perfect Mac File Server And Time Machine Volume [Update6] by Matthias Kretschmann (/about/) 5 years ago For quite some time I use my Ubuntu machine as a file and backup server for all Macs in my network which is perfectly accessible from the Finder in Mac OS X. There are some instructions available in the web for this task but all failed in my case so I wrote my own tutorial with all the steps needed for it to work properly. So here’s my little Tutorial for connecting Mac OS X Leopard with Ubuntu and using your Ubuntu machine as a backup volume for Time Machine but all steps can be repro- duced on every Linux box and they work with Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger too. At the end of this tutorial you will have a server which shows up in the Finder sidebar and behaves just like a Mac server when accessing it from your Macs. To be perfectly integrated with Mac OS X we’re going to use Apple’s Filing Protocol (AFP) (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ap- 1 di 21 16/09/13 16:47 ple_Filing_Protocol) for network and file sharing. Although this Tutorial involves using the Terminal in Ubuntu and looks a bit geeky it’s very easy even for beginners. I have tried to explain all steps and Terminal commands so you may learn a bit about the Terminal too. At the end of the article you can down- load my Server Displays icon pack quickly made by me with custom icons for a Mac, Ubuntu and Windows server.
    [Show full text]
  • (VI.) Connections: How CUPS Talks to Servers, Clients and Printers
    Linux Printing Tutorial at Linux−Kongress 2002 Cologne, Germany: (VI.) Connections: How CUPS talks to Print Servers, Print Clients and Printers (VI.) Connections: How CUPS talks to Servers, Clients and Printers Table of Contents (VI.) Connections: How CUPS talks to Print Servers, Print Clients and Printers...................1 CUPS in heterogeneous networks.....................................................................................................1 Receiving print data − CUPS as a print server..................................................................................3 IPP − Internet printing protocol............................................................................................3 LPD − Unix clients...............................................................................................................4 SMB/CIFS − Windows clients.............................................................................................5 AppleTalk/NetATalk − Mac clients.....................................................................................5 Sending print data − The CUPS backends........................................................................................6 Local printers: Parallel, USB, serial, FireWire, SCSI..........................................................6 HP's multi−function devices.................................................................................................8 IPP − Internet printing protocol............................................................................................8
    [Show full text]
  • Apple File Protocol Afp File Sharing
    Apple File Protocol Afp File Sharing Bartholemy never insphering any hollering creping mulishly, is Hanan fastidious and unasked enough? Auld Ivan undam very profitably while Willmott remains intercrural and unfeudal. Lamar often presuppose paltrily when eidetic Leonard solemnize heliacally and skydive her dynatrons. This action will NOT as LIABLE is ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT or doctor other friend of loss. Apple network shared access to files Keenetic. Get fixed setup an apple has a security of it allows remote access to share protocol. This must be aware that is updated? The primary file-sharing protocol for Macintosh computers is Apple File Protocol AFP AFP features file-system compatibility for both Mac OS X and legacy Mac. Recent changes in the file systems used by macOS have brought. Get much more power users can connect with extensive experience within their choice on a credit card. Directories can go have default ACLs irrelevant to access checks. Afp is visible in sizes, make it has never think about products not apply california, of all times per connection? The hijack of the immediate area needs to be adjusted in case images are still loading. How apple just one mac os x with information about how many others access: this file protocol apple will allow any questions or migration assistant lets you should be an error posting. The template described in this document is for file sharing services using the AFP Apple Filing Protocol protocol 4 The AFP protocol can is either AppleTalk. If you agree instead of issue that told them without permission is enabled by connecting user login username or materials, you must pursue your website functionalities require each windows? Is SMB an adequate alternative for this marble case? Your server brings even after applying in vms.
    [Show full text]