hi,
i have currently below mounts in solaris box and i want to create new mount points.
please let me know how can i do it?
bash-3.00# df -h
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
/ 1000M 350M 609M 37% /
/dev 1000M 350M ... (3 Replies)
I have 2 mounts with me. Each 200 Gigs. I have some heavy duty processing, that may require more than 200 Gigs at time. Is there anyway that I can make the two points a clubbed up directory. Or create a symbolic link (bleahhh). Here are factors:
1. two mounts are two different hard drives. (just... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I'm new to Linux and to this forum too. Now, I need some info.
I have an application which writes some data onto one mount(logs and others).
Now, I want to have some convention or script where if the mount(where the application is writing data) reaches certain amount of memory or if it... (1 Reply)
We need to allow ordinary users to preform NFS mounts on a AIX server without giving them root access to the server. Is there a way to give an ordinary users root access on a tem basis or a script to allow them to preform NFS mounts? (4 Replies)
Hi,
How can i check if a particular Netapps NAS share being used on some other servers - ie: being accessed, mounted?
example:
somedir - rw, intr servernetapp.net.com:/vol/vol100/somedir is being mounted on some filesystem on other server.
is it possible to check on the NIS? (1 Reply)
Hi all
I have an question about AMD daemon under unix.
We have an /share folder under folders mapped with NIS.
Now my question is
Im root I go to /share folder then enter ls -la it shows nothing, but I know f.e. now that there is a folder "dumps" which isnt visible.
If I enter cd dumps, it... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I was wondering, whether there is a limit regarding the max number of nfs mounts in
Oracle Solaris 10 (newest update).
The data center plans to migrate from a fibre channel based storage environment (hitachi) to a nfs based storage environment (netapp). Regarding the Solaris 10 database... (1 Reply)
I donot know much about CIFS but i have been asked to look into an issue related to mounting CIFS filesystem
On my redhat 5.6 the /etc/fstab file has the following entry
//172.25.x.x/de0/ /dir1/de0 cifs username=bodsadm,password=12345,dir_mode=0777,file_mode=0777,uid=de0adm,gid=sapsys,rw 0 0... (2 Replies)
We have 2 servers in cluster. Node1 has an ext3 mount for backups and the other connects using NFS to this node1.
I believe the reason it is configured in this manner is to not duplicate backups since this is a Database server. Not sure this was the reason though. Right now if node1 goes down all... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ikn3
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT X11R4
nfsmount.conf
NFSMOUNT.CONF(5) File Formats Manual NFSMOUNT.CONF(5)NAME
nfsmount.conf - Configuration file for NFS mounts
SYNOPSIS
Configuration file for NFS mounts that allows options to be set globally, per server or per mount point.
DESCRIPTION
The configuration file is made up of multiple sections followed by variables associated with that section. A section is defined by a
string enclosed by [ and ] branches. Variables are assignment statements that assign values to particular variables using the = operator,
as in Proto=Tcp. Sections are broken up into three basic categories: Global options, Server options and Mount Point options.
[ NFSMount_Global_Options ] - This statically named section defines all of the global mount options that can be applied to every NFS mount.
[ Server "Server_Name" ] - This section defines all the mount options that should be used on mounts to a particular NFS server. The
"Server_Name" strings needs to be surrounded by '"' and be an exact match of the server name used in the mount command.
[ MountPoint "Mount_Point" ] - This section defines all the mount options that should be used on a particular mount point. The
"Mount_Point" string needs to be surrounded by '"' and be an exact match of the mount point used in the mount command.
EXAMPLES
These are some example lines of how sections and variables are defined in the configuration file.
[ NFSMount_Global_Options ]
Proto=Tcp
The TCP protocol will be used on every NFS mount.
[ Server "nfsserver.foo.com" ]
rsize=32k
wsize=32k
A 33k (32768 bytes) block size will be used as the read and write size on all mounts to the 'nfsserver.foo.com' server.
[ MountPoint "/export/home" ]
Background=True
All mounts to the '/export/home' export will be performed in the background (i.e. done asynchronously).
FILES
/etc/nfsmount.conf
Default NFS mount configuration file
SEE ALSO nfs(5), mount(8),
9 Mar 2008 NFSMOUNT.CONF(5)