Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Amazon S3 storage mounting.
Operating Systems Solaris Amazon S3 storage mounting. Post 302361459 by Neo on Tuesday 13th of October 2009 08:53:41 AM
Old 10-13-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by jlliagre
Yes, it can be kludged (anything can be kludged), but it is not reliable and is not supported by Amazon AWS in this configuration.

---------- Post updated at 12:53 ---------- Previous update was at 12:44 ----------

BTW, if you do opt to use the s3fs, you cannot use ACLs or normal permissions in the filesystem:

Limitations
Quote:
no permissions checking
Edit:

Note that there are people who claim to use the s3fs in production, so there seems to be some progress since I last looked into this.
 

3 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Virtualization and Cloud Computing

CEP as a Service (CEPaaS) with MapReduce on Amazon EC2 and Amazon S3

Tim Bass 11-25-2008 01:02 PM Just as I was starting to worry that complex event processing community has been captured by RDBMS pirates off the coast of Somalia, I rediscovered a new core blackboard architecture component, Hadoop. Hadoop is a framework for building applications on large... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Linux Bot
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Problems with udev & mounting fat32 usb storage

I have been trying to get USB storage devices to auto-mount themselves under "/media/usb/<dev>" but have been running into some problems with udev (on FC7, btw... running udevd v.106) Every time I put in a FAT (not 32) USB stick, udev identifies it as "USB storage", identifies the partition and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jjinno
3 Replies

3. AIX

Mounting USB Mass Storage

Hi experts, recently i'm exploring USB with filesystem FAT32 mounting on my aix oslevel 6100-04-02-1007. I tried to google to get solutions but failed. Thus, i post it here hope to get solution. Appreciate :) This is my usb drives: (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: polar
5 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. mount.nfs4 is used for mounting NFSv4 file system, while mount.nfs is used to mount NFS file systems versions 3 or 2. 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. 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 04:27 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy