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Operating Systems Solaris NFS with a NAS: permanently inconsistent directory state across clients Post 302938946 by achenle on Friday 20th of March 2015 07:32:32 AM
Old 03-20-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by MadeInGermany
Ensure the mount points are directories with 755 permission! (umount to check.)
That too.

I see that nfsstat data and I see non-zero values in NFSv2 stats. Is the server Linux-based? Or Irix-based - nothing like inode numbers greater than 2 gig - the files are invisible to 32-bit applications running on Solaris since an inode number above 2 gig violates the specs for a 32-bit system.
 

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rpc.nfsd(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       rpc.nfsd(8)

NAME
rpc.nfsd - NFS server process SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/rpc.nfsd [-p port] nproc DESCRIPTION
The rpc.nfsd program implements the user level part of the NFS service. The main functionality is handled by the nfsd.o kernel module; the user space program merely starts the specified number of kernel threads. The rpc.mountd server provides an ancially service needed to satisfy mount requests by NFS clients. OPTIONS
-p port specify a diferent port to listen on for NFS requests. By default, rpc.nfsd will listen on port 2049. nproc specify the number of NFS server threads. By default, just one thread is started. However, for optimum performance several threads should be used. The actual figure depends on the number of and the work load created by the NFS clients, but a useful starting point is 8 threads. Effects of modifying that number can be checked using the nfsstat(8) program. SEE ALSO
rpc.mountd(8), exportfs(8), rpc.rquotad(8), nfsstat(8). AUTHOR
Olaf Kirch, Bill Hawes, H. J. Lu, G. Allan Morris III, and a host of others. 31 May 1999 rpc.nfsd(8)
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