Sponsored Content
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory NFS export filesystem with several partitions Post 302175811 by fmtu2005 on Sunday 16th of March 2008 04:30:12 AM
Old 03-16-2008
Well, I had very old server running 2.2 kernel and on that system I could see other submounts. It was my guess that it should be possible with new nfs too and defaults are only changed.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Relocating directory /export/home to a bigger filesystem

My 2GB /export/home/ directory is almost 100% full df -k | grep /export/home /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/vl73 2031711 1951009 19751 99% /export/home I intend to relocate it to a different 4GB filesystem late at night when there is no user on the system. How do I go... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Msororaji
3 Replies

2. HP-UX

nfs export permissions

Hello, If I have an export like: /usr/temp -rw=ram:alligator means that /usr/temp has "rw" permissions to ram and alligator machines and has "ro" to everyone else? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: psimoes79
1 Replies

3. Solaris

How to determine a partitions filesystem and inodes

Hey guys how do you determine what kind of Filesystem(vxfs) does a particular partition has. Also how do you determine how many inodes it has and how my is used and free. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sbn
3 Replies

4. Linux

How to determine a partitions filesystem and inodes

Hey guys how do you determine what kind of Filesystem(ext3) does a particular partition has. Also how do you determine how many inodes it has and how my is used and free. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sbn
3 Replies

5. Solaris

How do I export a zfs filesystem that I created?

I created a zpool and two ZFS volumes in OpenSolaris. I would like both ZFS volumes to be exportable. However, I don't know how to set that up. These are the steps I did: 1) Create the zpool using raidz1 across five disks. I have six disks and created a zpool across 5 of them. c4t0d0... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sqa777
3 Replies

6. Solaris

Could I re-export a NFS resource to a third server ?

Hey Guys. Could someone said if is possible take a NFS resource get it from a original Server a export it and mount it in a third server ? Thank in Advace.... SUN ADMIN (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aggadtech08
3 Replies

7. Solaris

nfs export not working at boot

we have a Solaris 8 nfs server that exported two shares. entries are in /etc/dfs/dfstab. clients have been accessing these shares for several years. we just rebooted this nfs server and noticed that no share gets exported. I don't see relevant messages from dmsg nor messages file, is there... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jalite19
6 Replies

8. AIX

nfs export

Hi How to export a file system from my aix box named ABC in such a way that everyone on the network should be able to import it When on the client side if they give showmount -e ABC it should show like this: # showmount -e ABC export list for ABC: /sybase/software (everyone) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newtoaixos
2 Replies

9. Red Hat

CIFS share re-export NFS

Hi Guys, need help here. i have windows server that share a folder C:/ABCDE i configure samba client in Linux server as /EDCBA and it working fine. then i want to share this /EDCBA to another Linux server using NFS. in the /etc/exportfs i have put /EDCBA - *(rw,no_root_squash) ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: prossits
1 Replies

10. AIX

CIFS share re-export NFS

Hi Guys, need help here. i have windows server that share a folder C:/ABCDE i configure samba client in AIX server as /EDCBA and it working fine. then i want to share this /EDCBA to another AIX server using NFS. in the /etc/exportfs i have put /EDCBA... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: prossits
1 Replies
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)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:09 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy