Hi all !
I am looking for a command in the terminal or GUI to mount
an NFS drive.
Second , is there any solution to get rid of / " * in old files names
I know it can be done i just dont know how !
Hope that some one can help
Best R.
Yovel (2 Replies)
Hi all
i have done set up for nfs.
at server
<dir> <client IP>/<netmask>(rw,sync)
at client
mount -o rw -nfs <server IP>:<dir1><dir2>
with this i am successful in mounting the directory with write permission.
But the write permission is not activate in client machine for the file which... (5 Replies)
While mounting nfs file system I get the following error .
# mount -F nfs jewelex:/back2 /oback2
nfs mount: jewelex:/back2: Permission denied
Following is the permission for oback2
drwxr-xr-x 2 root other 512 Apr 9 18:39 oback2
Directory permission on jewelex server is ... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Re-building linux server from a kickstart image on cdrom.
We have a kickstart server.
the cdrom contacins the kickstart ks.cfg file and does a NFS mount from an IP to load the iso images and other files needed during the kickstart (re-build)
Now for some reason the kickstart stops and... (2 Replies)
On my Solaris 10 server, I want to share out the directory /export/home/data, so in the /etc/dfs/dfstab file, I have this line:
share -F nfs -o rw /export/home/data
In the /etc/hosts.equiv file, I have this:
+
When I do a "ps -ef" command, I see that the "nfsd' daemon is started.
... (2 Replies)
I have one machine "The server" ip: 192.168.1.1, it runs ubu 8.04(LTS) and - I have a folder (/shareme) that I want to share with other linux machines on my LAN.
- The server runs NFS server and common and portmap and so do the other machines on my LAN.
- The server has the export file with the... (2 Replies)
Hello, I am looking for some assistance in mounting an nfs drive on boot, on a Solaris 11 machine.
On my Solaris 9/10 machines, I have an entry for my nfs mount in /etc/vfstab, however when I add the same entry to my vfstab on Solaris 11, the drive will not mount on boot. After booting up, I... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I need to mount an nfs filesystem as below.
xxx.xx.xx.xxx:/media/nss/Rocky Catherine/logs
For the above as there is space in between the name, hoping it will not mount, if i give it with double quotes as below will it work?
mount "xxx.xx.xx.xxx:/media/nss/Rocky... (2 Replies)
The server ip is 10.2.2.24. I have installed nfs-utils package the i have edited /etc/exports
i have added the following line
/home 10.2.2.0/24(rw,sync,no_root_squash,no_all_squash)
i have saved, i have started the nfs service, then i am trying to mount nfs sharing from client machine using... (1 Reply)
The server ip is 10.2.2.24. I have installed nfs-utils package the i have edited /etc/exports
i have added the following line
/home 10.2.2.0/24(rw,sync,no_root_squash,no_all_squash)
i have saved, i have started the nfs service, then i am trying to mount nfs sharing from client machine using... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ainstin
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
fs
default_fs(4) File Formats default_fs(4)NAME
default_fs, fs - specify the default file system type for local or remote file systems
DESCRIPTION
When file system administration commands have both specific and generic components (for example, fsck(1M)), the file system type must be
specified. If it is not explicitly specified using the -F FSType command line option, the generic command looks in /etc/vfstab in order to
determine the file system type, using the supplied raw or block device or mount point. If the file system type can not be determined by
searching /etc/vfstab, the command will use the default file system type specified in either /etc/default/fs or /etc/dfs/dfstypes, depend-
ing on whether the file system is local or remote.
The default local file system type is specified in /etc/default/fs by a line of the form LOCAL=fstype (for example, LOCAL=ufs). The default
remote file system type is determined by the first entry in the /etc/dfs/fstypes file.
File system administration commands will determine whether the file system is local or remote by examining the specified device name. If
the device name starts with ``/'' (slash), it is considered to be local; otherwise it is remote.
The default file system types can be changed by editing the default files with a text editor.
FILES
/etc/vfstab list of default parameters for each file system
/etc/default/fs the default local file system type
/etc/dfs/fstypes the default remote file system type
SEE ALSO fsck(1M), fstypes(4), vfstab(4)SunOS 5.11 20 Mar 1992 default_fs(4)