Just tested on a RH5E..
I did not get you message but it did not mount... and I wasnt going to wait for timeout...
using my suggested syntax mount was immediate
/etc/exports from 10.20 conetent:
from ronas side:
I have a NFS share on a Linux server. When I try to mount it on a Solaris 9 server, I get the following message:
nfs mount: <nfs-server-name>: : RPC: Program not registered
I have a few other Sun boxes and I can mount the share on them without any problems. (2 Replies)
Hey people i'm very new to linux. I just put a extra 200 gig maxtor HD in my computer. Linux can tell it's there...but it says it cant mount it. How do i mount it manually?
thanks,
John (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am facing problem during mount sharing. I am using two machines Suse and Red Hat. Trying to share a data on suse machine from Red Hat by using mount command.
The problem is that after rebooting mount won't work. How to solve this problem.
What i did?
1. create a folder on Suse... (7 Replies)
hi all...
when I try to mount filesystem on solaris appear me Permission denied
this is do it:
mount -F nfs <remote file system> <mount point>
mount -f nfs remot_server:/share /share
when i run this line:
nfs mount: server_remoto:/share: Permission denied
what i need to do?
Regards.. (4 Replies)
well i have an NFS server setup on a pc "1st server" running Fedora Core 4 and i need to mount this from a non-root user. But when i try this i get this freaking error "mount: only root can do this". i do have the entry in fstab file and i tried following solution (no one are working)
entry in... (1 Reply)
Hi everyone, I am new to Linux and I hope to have some advise.
Suppose I have 2 differnt users who require differnt mount drives. When user1 logs in, his required drives are mounted. When user2 logs in, user1's drives are unmounted and user2's drives are mounted.
May I know how I can achieve... (2 Replies)
folks;
I have 3 similar Linux SUSE 10 servers A, B & C
I log as root and when i'm on B server & try to mount a directory on A server it works fine, but when i try to mount the same directory when i'm on C it doesn't and i get this error:
Server C# mount 172.32.5.2:/var/local/export/... (4 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I am trying following command on my solaris box:
mount abchostlinux12:/data1/mount_dir /data/mount_dir
OUTPUT:
nfs mount: abchostlinux12: : RPC: Rpcbind failure - RPC: Success
nfs mount: retrying: /data/mount_dir
After this there is no response on command line. I have... (6 Replies)
every day i must type # mount -a in the workstation to mount the directory from the server .
note
1- fstab is very good no problem in it
2- the network in this workstation is stable
3- i check every thing in this workstation but i dont see any problem
4- the O.S RedHat 3u9
every day the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ayman
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
mqueuefs
MQUEUEFS(5) BSD File Formats Manual MQUEUEFS(5)NAME
mqueuefs -- POSIX message queue file system
SYNOPSIS
To link into kernel:
options P1003_1B_MQUEUE
To load as a kernel loadable module:
kldload mqueuefs
DESCRIPTION
The mqueuefs module will permit the FreeBSD kernel to support POSIX message queue. The module contains system calls to manipulate POSIX mes-
sage queues. It also contains a file system to implement a view for all message queues of the system. This helps users to keep track of
their message queues and make it more easily usable without having to invent additional tools.
The most common usage is as follows:
mount -t mqueuefs null /mnt/mqueue
where /mnt/mqueue is a mount point.
It is possible to define an entry in /etc/fstab that looks similar to:
null /mnt/mqueue mqueuefs rw 0 0
This will mount mqueuefs at the /mnt/mqueue mount point during system boot. Using /mnt/mqueue as a permanent mount point is not advised as
its intention has always been to be a temporary mount point. See hier(7) for more information on FreeBSD directory layout.
Some common tools can be used on the file system, e.g.: cat(1), chmod(1), chown(8), ls(1), rm(1), etc. To use only the message queue system
calls, it is not necessary for user to mount the file system, just load the module or compile it into the kernel. Manually creating a file,
for example, ``touch /mnt/mqueue/myqueue'', will create a message queue named myqueue in the kernel, default message queue attributes will be
applied to the queue. It is not advised to use this method to create a queue; it is better to use the mq_open(2) system call to create a
queue as it allows the user to specify different attributes.
To see the queue's attributes, just read the file:
cat /mnt/mqueue/myqueue
SEE ALSO mq_open(2), nmount(2), unmount(2), mount(8), umount(8)AUTHORS
This manual page was written by David Xu <davidxu@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD November 30, 2005 BSD