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Full Discussion: Chgrp failed on NAS mounted
Operating Systems Solaris Chgrp failed on NAS mounted Post 302894663 by MadeInGermany on Wednesday 26th of March 2014 03:33:33 PM
Old 03-26-2014
Hmm, a NAS server should know the users and groups.
If not, I do not have practical experience what exactly happens. NFSv3 might pass the request to the server, and the server denies it.
Or do you use NFSv4? To find out, please run
Code:
nfsstat -m

The automounter does not matter here.
 

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rlm_expr(5)							 FreeRADIUS Module						       rlm_expr(5)

NAME
rlm_expr - FreeRADIUS Module DESCRIPTION
The rlm_expr module allows the server to perform limited mathematical calculations. This module is not called directly in any section, it is invoked through the dynamic expansion of strings. For example, some NAS boxes send a NAS-Port attribute which is a 32-bit number composed of port, card, and interface, all in different bytes. To see these attributes split into pieces, you can have an entry in the 'users' file like: DEFAULT Vendor-Interface = `%{expr: %{NAS-Port} / (256 * 256)}`, Vendor-Card = `%{expr: (%{NAS-Port} / 256) %% 256}`, Vendor-Port = `%{expr: %{NAS-Port} %% 256}` where the attributes Vendor-Interface, Vendor-Card, and Vendor-Port are attributes created by either you or a vendor-supplied dictionary. The methematical operators supported by the expression module are: + addition - subtraction / division %% modulo remainder * multiplication & boolean AND | boolean OR () grouping of sub-expressions NOTE: The modulo remainder operator is '%%', and not '%'. This is due to the '%' character being used as a special character for dynamic translation. NOTE: These operators do NOT have precedence. The parsing of the input string, and the calculation of the answer, is done strictly left to right. If you wish to order the expressions, you MUST group them into sub-expression, as shown in the previous example. All of the calculations are performed as unsigned 32-bit integers. CONFIGURATION
modules { ... expr { } ... } ... instantiate { ... expr ... } SECTIONS
instantiate FILES
/etc/raddb/radiusd.conf SEE ALSO
radiusd(8), radiusd.conf(5) AUTHOR
Chris Parker, cparker@segv.org 5 February 2004 rlm_expr(5)
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