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Full Discussion: NFS Mount: Permission Denied
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers NFS Mount: Permission Denied Post 302170667 by jackola on Tuesday 26th of February 2008 09:35:25 AM
Old 02-26-2008
Power

Thanks for the suggestion, however, the NFS server and client can access each other without problems. When I do the 'host x.x.x.x' I get the host name back, when I do 'host server-2' from server-1 (which is the NFS server), I get the correct IP back. The same can be said reversely from the client server (server-2).

I don't know why there is the permission problem as I tested scp from both servers to the other server and into the correct directory without problems.

Does anyone know whether the shared directory needs to be owned by another user other than root? (but I did give the directory a recursive chmod to 777 just for testing purposes).

Furthermore, does anyone know whether I need to identify the NFS client (server-2) in any of the configurations on the NFS server (server-1)?
 

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MOUNT.NFS(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      MOUNT.NFS(8)

NAME
mount.nfs, mount.nfs4 - mount a Network File System SYNOPSIS
mount.nfs remotetarget dir [-rvVwfnsh ] [-o options] DESCRIPTION
mount.nfs is a part of nfs(5) utilities package, which provides NFS client functionality. mount.nfs is meant to be used by the mount(8) command for mounting NFS shares. This subcommand, however, can also be used as a standalone command with limited functionality. remotetarget is a server share usually in the form of servername:/path/to/share. dir is the directory on which the file system is to be mounted. Under Linux 2.6.32 and later kernel versions, mount.nfs can mount all NFS file system versions. Under earlier Linux kernel versions, mount.nfs4 must be used for mounting NFSv4 file systems while mount.nfs must be used for NFSv3 and v2. OPTIONS
-r Mount file system readonly. -v Be verbose. -V Print version. -w Mount file system read-write. -f Fake mount. Don't actually call the mount system call. -n Do not update /etc/mtab. By default, an entry is created in /etc/mtab for every mounted file system. Use this option to skip making an entry. -s Tolerate sloppy mount options rather than fail. -h Print help message. nfsoptions Refer to nfs(5) or mount(8) manual pages. NOTE
For further information please refer nfs(5) and mount(8) manual pages. FILES
/etc/fstab file system table /etc/mtab table of mounted file systems SEE ALSO
nfs(5), mount(8), AUTHOR
Amit Gud <agud@redhat.com> 5 Jun 2006 MOUNT.NFS(8)
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