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Operating Systems Solaris NFS with a NAS: permanently inconsistent directory state across clients Post 302938966 by cosmojetz on Friday 20th of March 2015 11:19:55 AM
Old 03-20-2015
The inode number of the problem file in question is: 1080094

Yes, the NFS server is Linux-based.

Re. ensure mount points are 755: yes, they are; otherwise I wouldn't be able to create any directories/files. Note that the problem occurs only with some newly created directories, but when it does occur, it is consistent (directory can never be read).

Regarding the other problem (perhaps related): even with freshly mounted nfs dirs, the two clients show different group permissions for all files/dirs:

Example of same dir:
Client1:
drwxrwx---+ 58 user group
Client2:
drwx------+ 58 user group

Both user and group are defined with same ids in /etc/passwd, /etc/group. What config might be faulty to warrant this behavior?

Thanks.
 

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MOUNT_APFS(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     MOUNT_APFS(8)

NAME
mount_apfs -- mount an APFS volume SYNOPSIS
mount_apfs [-o options] [-u user] [-g group] special directory mount_apfs [-o options] -s snapshot pathname directory DESCRIPTION
The mount_apfs command attaches the APFS volume indicated by the device special to the global file system namespace at the location indicated by directory. This command is normally executed by diskarbitrationd(8) or mount(8) at boot time. The special parameter should be the path to an APFS pseudo disk device node, such as /dev/disk0s2s1 (which is a volume inside the container /dev/disk0s2), which can also be specified as simply disk0s2s1. The options are as follows: -o options Options passed to mount(2) are specified with the -o option followed by a comma separated string of options. See the mount(8) man page for possible options and their meanings. -u user Set the owner of the files in the file system to user. The default owner is the owner of the directory on which the file system is being mounted. The user may be a user-name, or a numeric value. -g group Set the group of the files in the file system to group. The default group is the group of the directory on which the file system is being mounted. The group may be a group-name, or a numeric value. -s snapshot The name of the snapshot to mount. In this usage pathname is the mounted root directory of the base volume containing the snapshot. DIAGNOSTICS
The mount_apfs utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
mount(2), unmount(2), fstab(5), mount(8) HISTORY
The mount_apfs utility first appeared in OS X 10.12. Mac OS X September 16, 2015 Mac OS X
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