Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat RHEL 7.1 autofs permissions do not match NFS servers Post 302971958 by mrmurdock on Wednesday 27th of April 2016 01:59:55 PM
Old 04-27-2016
Ok thanks. I guess I need to be more clear.

The NFS server home directory uid and gid is not propagating to the RHEL 7.1 Client. only nobody:nobody is being set.

---------- Post updated at 11:59 AM ---------- Previous update was at 11:15 AM ----------

Figured it out. IT has to do with the NFSV4 from the Solaris host. You have to set the client idmapd.conf nfsdomain field to be the same DOMAIN as the RHEL client, or simply mount the CLient as Version3.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

nfs permissions

Hi all can someone tell me how to set the follwoing permissions in the /etc/exports file to share a directory. I need 2 users eg a+b to be able to read and write to the directory but everyone else to just read. we have NIS in our environment and I though I could use netgroups do do this. My... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: silvaman
2 Replies

2. Solaris

disabling nfs and autofs in solaris 9

Hi, I want to permanently disable nfs and autofs in solaris 9, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
2 Replies

3. Solaris

autofs vs nfs

I've a sun server, 3 sun workstations and plan to do backup on certain directory in each workstations monthly. As it's only require to mount as NFS on those workstations once a month. So I plan to configure such requirement using autofs. What are the considerations need to take care in such... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: KhawHL
4 Replies

4. Red Hat

cfengine / puppet for rhel servers

Hello all, I am planning to deploy a configuration / auditing software package for about 100 new nodes that we are planning to install. I am hearing many good things in regards to cfengine and puppet. Can someone shed some light in regards to these solutions? Thanks, jaysunn (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jaysunn
1 Replies

5. Red Hat

RHEL 5.6 Slow rsync to NFS array

Hi All, I have RHEL 5.6 with a 70GB local directory of Web content. Images, PHP scripts etc. I need to copy all this content to an NFS array thats mounted on the RHEL server. I did a baseline cp to copy the content one week ago. Since my baseline copy the local directory has grown by 8GB.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: general_lee
2 Replies

6. Red Hat

cannot ssh (use NFS) on RHEL box, but can mount external & ssh out of RHEL box

Ok, Im trying to get NFS working on my RHEL 5 box, apparently i can use the box as a client, but not as a server. If it helps i cant ssh into the box (server), but as a client ssh works fine. Ive configured server: /etc/hosts.allow: all : all all :all@all setup my /etc/exports file... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: drs.grid
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

NFS issue with autofs in CentOS 6.3

I am running CentOS 6.3 as a VM on a host which has the same installation. I configured my NFS server and I am guessing it works. I say guessing because I can mount the desired folder with mount command on my client machine. So, when I run: mount -t nfs -o vers=3 vm2.domain.com:/nethome /nethit... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bashily
7 Replies

8. Red Hat

How to mount NFS using automounter(autofs)?

I have an nfs at 192.168.1.10:/home/vm1/Desktop/nfs and will like to mount locally to /home/vm1/Desktop/nfs-mount using automounter...need help doing do What i did $cat /etc/auto.master /home/vm1/Desktop /etc/auto.nfs $cat /etc/auto.nfs nfs-bind -fstype=nfs ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nokia3310
3 Replies

9. Red Hat

NFS, AD, AutoFS

Here's my challenge. I have a RedHat7 machine running a statistical software package. It needs to NFS-mount directories from a Windows 2008R2 machine. The RH7 machine uses MSAD (Microsoft Active Directory) to handle authentication of people connecting via SSH. AD is on a separate 2008R2 machine.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cjhilinski
5 Replies

10. Solaris

RHEL NFS share on Solaris 11.3 vers=4

NFS server: RHEL:6 /nfsdb 192.168.8.10/28(rw,sync,no_root_squash) 192.168.7.10/28(rw,sync,no_root_squash) Client: Solaris 11.3 vfstab entry : 192.168.8.9:/nfsdbarch - /archive_data nfs - yes rw,soft,vers=4 # ls -ld /archive_data drwxr-xr-x 4 root root... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Shirishlnx
3 Replies
RPC.IDMAPD(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     RPC.IDMAPD(8)

NAME
rpc.idmapd -- NFSv4 ID <-> Name Mapper SYNOPSIS
rpc.idmapd [-v] [-f] [-d domain] [-p path] [-U username] [-G groupname] [-c path] DESCRIPTION
rpc.idmapd is the NFSv4 ID <-> name mapping daemon. It provides functionality to the NFSv4 kernel client and server, to which it communi- cates via upcalls, by translating user and group IDs to names, and vice versa. The options are as follows: -v Increases the verbosity level (can be specified multiple times). -f Runs rpc.idmapd in the foreground and prints all output to the terminal. -d domain Set domain to domain. This is used internally by NFSv4 and is typically assigned by the system administrator. By default, domain is set to be the FQDN of the host, minus the hostname. -p path Specifies the location of the RPC pipefs to be path. The default value is "/var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs". -U username Specifies the NFSv4 nobody user to be username. The default value is "nobody". -G groupname Specifies the NFSv4 nobody group to be groupname. The default value is "nobody". -c path Use configuration file path. -C Client-only: perform no idmapping for any NFS server, even if one is detected. -S Server-only: perform no idmapping for any NFS client, even if one is detected. EXAMPLES
rpc.idmapd -d "citi.umich.edu" -f -vvv Runs rpc.idmapd with the domain "citi.umich.edu" in the foreground, printing all messages to console, and with a verbosity level of 3. FILES
/etc/idmapd.conf SEE ALSO
idmapd.conf(5) AUTHORS
The rpc.idmapd software has been developed by Marius Aamodt Eriksen <marius@citi.umich.edu>. BSD
February 3, 2003 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:54 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy