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The first NFS Version 3 proposal within Sun Microsystems was created not long after the release of NFS Version 2. The principal motivation was an attempt to mitigate the performance issue of the synchronous write operation in NFS Version 2.<ref name="usenix94">{{cite web |url= https://www.usenix.org/legacy/publications/library/proceedings/bos94/full_papers/pawlowski.ps |title=NFS Version 3 Design and Implementation |year=1994 |publisher=[[USENIX]] |author1=Brian Pawlowski |author2=Chet Juszczak |author3=Peter Staubach |author4=Carl Smith |author5=Diane Lebel |author6=David Hitz }}</ref> By July 1992, implementation practice had solved many shortcomings of NFS Version 2, leaving only lack of large file support (64-bit file sizes and offsets) a pressing issue. At the time of introduction of Version 3, vendor support for [[Transmission Control Protocol|TCP]] as a [[transport layer|transport-layer]] protocol began increasing. While several vendors had already added support for NFS Version 2 with TCP as a transport, Sun Microsystems added support for TCP as a transport for NFS at the same time it added support for Version 3. Using TCP as a transport made using NFS over a [[Wide area network|WAN]] more feasible, and allowed the use of larger read and write transfer sizes beyond the 8 KB limit imposed by [[User Datagram Protocol]].
====YANFS/WebNFS====
{{anchor|WebNFS|reason=Old section name; could have incoming links, though they should probably go to the main article.}}
{{Main|WebNFS}}
YANFS (Yet Another NFS), formerly [[WebNFS]],
===NFSv4===
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