Hello All,
I have a question that I think I have the answer to but I'm not sure. All the information I get kind of dance around it. Well, my question is if you have NFS running, automount running, with auto_master and auto_home on a server. If a user logs in form cleint machine that has... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
First of all, i am so sorry about my bad level in English writing.
I have some problem in linux and i hope the experts of this forum to help me if they have enough time to reply to me.
I have a scenario of configuring NIS and NFS in Redhat Linux environment such that user can login... (0 Replies)
Hi,
For a new requirement, we are trying to use NFS mounted directory as the buffer (TMP_DIR) for untar.
Target OS- VxWorks
Host OS - Windows Embedded.
mounted a directory in wondows onto VxWorks.
During untar process of GNU we come across utime, for chaning the time stamp of the... (0 Replies)
My issue is I want an NFS share where I can write to the directory, but not list any of the files in there. (doesn't matter if someone knows the name can open the file).
Have an NFS export for example:
drwxrwxrw- 2 cranes staff 256 18 May 12:48 cranes
The export will only... (1 Reply)
I have installed Solaris 11 Express on my machine, created a raidz2 zpool named shares and set up sharing (zfs set sharesmb=on shares). I also created a script for automatic backuping using snapshots.
Everything worked fine. But yesterday I tried recovering from one of those backuped snapshots:... (1 Reply)
I shared from linux server a dir with nfs3,solaris mount
ok,and can tar files,but if i do ls or cp..
on mnt i have mount the nfs share
root@solaris: mnt $ touch 2
root@solaris: mnt $ ls -lh
ls: can't read ACL on .: Permission denied
root@solaris: mnt $ ls
1.tar
2
root@solaris: mnt $ cp... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to know how can we mount a directory using nfs v4 ?
When I use the below command, I am not sure what nfs version am using to mount the directory.
mount -t <server_name>:<shared_directory> <shared_directory>.
eg:
mount -t 10.50.0.8:/home/arun/mount/share_dir... (7 Replies)
I'm having a strange issue that I'm unsure what to do with. I have a new Solaris home server that I want hard mount /home to all our servers. I've made each user's home directory a filesystem so that I can manage every user with a quota. In each one of my server vfstab files I have it set as:
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am having some NFS directory consistency problems with the below setup on a local (192.) network:
1. Different permissions (chmod) for the same NFS dir are reflected on different clients.
2. (more serious) an NFS dir created on client1 cannot be accessed on client2; this applies to some... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I have exported a few nfs mounts from one server to the nfs clients.
This is my nfs server dfstab :
# cat /etc/dfs/dfstab
# place share(1M) commands here for automatic execution
# on entering init state 3.
#
# share <pathname>
# .e.g,
# share -F... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anaigini45
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
go-test
GO-TEST(1) General Commands Manual GO-TEST(1)NAME
go - tool for managing Go source code
SYNOPSIS
go test [-c] [-i] [ build flags ] [ packages ] [ flags for test binary ]
DESCRIPTION
"Go test" automates testing the packages named by the import paths. It prints a summary of the test results in the format:
ok archive/tar 0.011s
FAIL archive/zip 0.022s
ok compress/gzip 0.033s
...
followed by detailed output for each failed package.
"Go test" recompiles each package along with any files with names matching the file pattern "*_test.go". These additional files can con-
tain test functions, benchmark functions, and example functions. See go-testfunc(7) for more.
By default, go test needs no arguments. It compiles and tests the package with source in the current directory, including tests, and runs
the tests.
The package is built in a temporary directory so it does not interfere with the non-test installation.
OPTIONS
In addition to the build flags, the flags handled by 'go test' itself are:
-c Compile the test binary to pkg.test but do not run it.
-i Install packages that are dependencies of the test. Do not run the test.
The test binary also accepts flags that control execution of the test; these flags are also accessible by 'go test'. See go-testflag(7)
for details.
For more about build flags, see go-build(1).
For more about specifying packages, see go-packages(7).
SEE ALSO go-build(1), go-vet(1).
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
2012-05-13 GO-TEST(1)