Hi, How can i mount an NFS share on a solaris machine a filesystem ?
I have enabled nfs on a windows server and the shares has given read/write access to it to all the users. I would like to mount it on around 10 different solaris boxes with different versions of solaris.
Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
We recently replaced an existing Windows Server 2000 with a Windows Server 2003. The server‘s primary function is file/print in our development environment.
One of the directories is shared using NFS. All compiled software is kept in this share (we use C & C++). The generated “.out” and “.ndb”... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to access a NFS shared directory on Solaris 10 Server from a client which is RHEL 4 Server.
On the NFS Server, in /etc/dfs/, I added following line to dfstab file.
& then ran the following
On the client machine, while running the mount command, I am... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to access a NFS shared directory on Solaris 10 Server from a client which is RHEL 4 Server.
On the NFS Server, in /etc/dfs/, I added following line to dfstab file.
share -F nfs -o rw /var/share
& then ran the following
svcadm -v enable -r... (3 Replies)
Hi Guru's,
I am unable to mount NFS share on unix system (DG/UX) which is nfs client.
Error:
mount: /nfsshare: Invalid argument
mount: giving up on:
/mountpoint
i tried following command
mount -t nfs remotehost:/nfsshare /mountpoint
Error: (5 Replies)
Hi all, new here.
I'm attempting to mount an NFS share I've created on a 2012r2 esx VM on my solaris 10 vm, I'm using the following command:
mount 2012box:/sharename /mnt
and I get the following result:
nfs mount: mount: /mnt: Operation not supported
Both vms can ping one... (3 Replies)
I need a help of good people with effective bash script to mount nfs shared,
By the way I did the searches, since i haven't found that someone wrote a script like this in the past, I'm sure it will serve more people.
The scenario as follow:
An NFS Client with Daily CRON , running bash script... (4 Replies)
I have a Solaris 10 server, I'm trying to mount a share from a Windows nfs server. If I add this entry (tst-walnut:/test_sap_nfs - /majid nfs - yes rw,soft) to my /etc/vfstab, then I can mount, but when I create a file by root:root, the file owner changes to... (1 Reply)
Hi
We took the reboot of server/global zone after that Solaris 11 share local zone not able to ping the default gateway but global zone able to ping same default gateway. I check/compare the before activity logs of global zone and local zones which looks fine to me, further IP and netmask of... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sb200
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
nfs
nfs(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual nfs(7)NAME
nfs, NFS - network file system
DESCRIPTION
The Network File System (NFS) allows a client node to perform transparent file access over the network. By using NFS, a client node oper-
ates on files residing on a variety of servers and server architectures, and across a variety of operating systems. File access calls on
the client (such as read requests) are converted to NFS protocol requests and sent to the server system over the network. The server
receives the request, performs the actual file system operation, and sends a response back to the client.
NFS operates in a stateless manner using remote procedure calls (RPC) built on top of an external data representation (XDR) protocol. The
RPC protocol enables version and authentication parameters to be exchanged for security over the network.
A server grants access to a specific file system to clients by adding an entry for that file system to the server's file.
A client gains access to that file system using the command to request a file handle for the file system (see mount(1M)). (A file handle
is the means by which NFS identifies remote files.) Once a client mounts the file system, the server issues a file handle to the client
for each file (or directory) the client accesses. If the file is removed on the server side, the file handle becomes stale (dissociated
with a known file), and the server returns an error with set to
A server can also be a client with respect to file systems it has mounted over the network; however, its clients cannot directly access
those file systems. If a client attempts to mount a file system for which the server is an NFS client, the server returns with set to The
client must mount the file system directly from the server on which the file system resides.
The user ID and group ID mappings must be the same between client and server. However, the server maps UID 0 (the superuser) to UID -2
before performing access checks for a client. This process prevents gaining superuser privileges on remote file systems.
RETURN VALUE
Generally, physical disk I/O errors detected at the server are returned to the client for action. If the server is down or inaccessible,
the client receives the message:
where is the hostname of the NFS server. The client continues resending the request until it receives an acknowledgement from the server.
Therefore, the server can crash or power down, and come back up without any special action required by the client. The client process
requesting the I/O will block, but remains sensitive to signals (unless mounted with the option) until the server recovers. However, if
mounted with the option, the client process returns an error instead of waiting indefinitely.
AUTHOR
was developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.
SEE ALSO exportfs(1M), share(1M), mount(1M), mount_nfs(1M), nfsd(1M), mount(2), fstab(4), dfstab(4).
nfs(7)