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Known issues with NFS 3.0 in Azure Blob Storage - Azure Storage

Known issues with Network File System (NFS) 3.0 protocol support for Azure Blob Storage

This article describes limitations and known issues of Network File System (NFS) 3.0 protocol support for Azure Blob Storage.

Important

Because you must enable the hierarchical namespace feature of your account to use NFS 3.0, all of the known issues that are described in the Known issues with Azure Data Lake Storage article also apply to your account.

NFS 3.0 support NFS 3.0 features

The following NFS 3.0 features aren't yet supported.

NFS 3.0 clients

Windows client for NFS isn't yet supported. However, there's a workaround available that uses the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL 2) to mount storage by using the NFS 3.0 protocol. See the BlobNFS-wsl2 project on GitHub.

Blob Storage features

When you enable NFS 3.0 protocol support, some Blob Storage features are fully supported, but some features might be supported only at the preview level or not yet supported at all.

To see how each Blob Storage feature is supported in accounts that have NFS 3.0 support enabled, see Blob Storage feature support for Azure Storage accounts.

Note

Static websites is an example of a partially supported feature because the configuration page for static websites does not yet appear in the Azure portal for accounts that have NFS 3.0 support enabled. You can enable static websites only by using PowerShell or Azure CLI.

Blob Storage events

The names of NFS operations don't appear in resource logs or in responses returned by the Event Grid. Only block blob operations appear. When your application makes a request by using the NFS 3.0 protocol, that request is translated into combination of block blob operations. For example, NFS 3.0 read Remote Procedure Call (RPC) requests are translated into Get Blob operation. NFS 3.0 write RPC requests are translated into a combination of Get Block List, Put Block, and Put Block List.

Storage Events aren't supported for NFS specific operations. However, if you're performing blob or data lake storage operations on NFS enabled account, then the events shall get created based on the API being called.

Files and directories that you create in an NFS share always inherit the group ID of the parent directory regardless of whether the Set Group Identification (SGID) is set on the parent directory.

See also

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