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Intro
The Need For Speed
Need For Speed II
NFS III: Hot Pursuit
NFS IV: High Stakes
NFS Porsche Unleashed
NFS Hot Pursuit 2
NFS Underground
NFS Underground 2
NFS Most Wanted
NFS Carbon
NFS Pro Street
NFS Undercover
NFS Shift
NFS World
NFS Hot Pursuit 2010
NFS Shift 2
NFS The Run
NFS Most Wanted 2012
NFS Rivals
Need For Speed 2015
NFS Payback
NFS Heat
Bonus
Outro
We will now take a look at my computer running Windows Server 2012 R2.
First we will open Server Manager from the quick launch bar.
Select “Add roles and features” to start the Add roles and features wizard.
As we will be installing this on a local server, we will leave the first two screens as their defaults and click next.
On the Server Selection screen, we will select the local server ‘NYDC1’ from the list and click next.
On the Server Roles screen, we will select the NFS Server role. (We will discuss the client component later on in the video.) Expand ‘File and Storage Services’ and then expand the sub-category ‘File and iSCSI services’ then select the Server for NFS component.
Click next.
The next screen will ask if you would like to install additional features. In our case today, we do not need any additional features so we will just press next.
Once the install is complete, we will close the wizard and then open up Windows Explorer.
We’ll select the D Drive and create a new folder called ‘Data’. This will be the folder we share using NFS.
Next, we will create a text document called “Data folder on NYDC1.txt” so when we connect to it later in the video using the client, I can identify it.
With the folder now created, the next step is to share it. To do this, we will right click on the folder and select properties.
To share the folder using NFS, select the NFS Sharing tab.
On the NFS Sharing tab, press the button “Manage NFS Sharing” to bring up the NFS sharing dialog.
To share the folder, tick the option at the top “Share this folder”.
With the folder shared, there are some additional options that can be configured, but that is beyond the scope of this video.
In our case, I will select the option “Allow anonymous access”. This will allow the NFS share to be accessed without a username and password.
Next we will determine which computers we will enable to access the share. To do this, we will press the permissions button.
We see by default that all machines have the “allow read-only access” to the share.
To add additional permissions, we’ll select the Add button.
In this case, I will add the computer NYDC1, which is the server.
Later in the video, we’ll be trying to connect to the share from the NYDC1 server and we want to ensure that it has access when we do.
Notice, for the type of access, I can select read-only or read-write. We’ll leave it on Read/Write and then press OK to exit the dialog.
Notice that if the permission “all machines” is selected, the remove button is unavailable and greyed out. This permission cannot be removed, so if you wanted to remove permissions, you will need to change the access to “No Access”. Since we have added NYDC1 into the permissions list, this essentially limits access to ONLY NYDC1.
This step is to connect the new NFS share to Windows. To do this, however, an additional feature is required. Keep in mind that Windows Server and Windows OS versions earlier than 8.1 support this feature, however Windows 8.1 does not have this support built in. If you are using 8.1, you will need additional software to access an NFS share.