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Operating Systems Solaris RHEL NFS share on Solaris 11.3 vers=4 Post 302976152 by Navkreddy on Friday 24th of June 2016 10:34:54 AM
Old 06-24-2016
Please check the ownership of the /nfsdb in your RHEL server. If /nfsdb owned by root:root Check the domain name in /etc/default/nfs otherwise Try to create same user and group in client and give the same ownership to /archive_data then try to mount them. Let's see how it works.

Thanks,
Naveen.
 

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MOUNT.FEDFS(8)						      System Manager's Manual						    MOUNT.FEDFS(8)

NAME
mount.fedfs - mount a FedFS domain root SYNOPSIS
mount.fedfs remotedir localdir [-fhnrsvVw] [-o options] DESCRIPTION
RFC 5716 introduces the Federated File System (FedFS, for short). FedFS is an extensible standardized mechanism by which system adminis- trators construct a coherent namespace across multiple file servers using file system referrals. For further details, see fedfs(7). The mount.fedfs(8) command locates FedFS domains by looking for DNS SRV records that advertise file servers exporting FedFS domain root replicas. The remotedir argument determines what FedFS domain is mounted and what network file system protocol is used. The mount.fedfs(8) command sorts the list of available domain root replicas according to the SRV record sorting rules outlined in RFC 2782. It attempts to contact each file server appearing in the SRV record list until a mount request succeeds or the end of the SRV record list is reached. Command line arguments The first argument, remotedir, is the globally useful name to mount. Globally useful names are discussed in more detail in fedfs(7). The second argument, localdir, specifies the local directory on which to mount the requested FedFS globally useful name. As with other file systems, localdir must exist on the client for a mount request to succeed. The mount.fedfs(8) command converts the specified remotedir and localdir arguments, along with information obtained via DNS SRV queries, to arguments suitable for a local mount request. It then forks and execs the appropriate file system mount subcommand (such as the mount.nfs(8) subcommand) to mount the file server where the domain root resides. Because an unmodified file system mount subcommand is used for the actual mount operation, the file system's equivalent umount subcommand is all that is required to unmount this mount point when it is finished being used. Mount option inheritance The Linux NFS client treats an NFS referral as a server-initiated mount request. The referring fileserver provides only a list of server names and export paths. The mount options for this new mount are inherited from the new mount point's parent directory on the client. As applications proceed deeper into a domain's namespace, they can encounter both file sets to which they have read-only access, and file sets to which they have read-write access. To allow applications proper access to both types of file sets, typically file-access clients mount domain root directories in read-write mode. All submounts of the domain root are then mounted read-write as well. Write access is then controlled by fileservers. For example, a domain root may contain an NFS version 4 referral to an export containing user home directories. The domain root may be exported read-only so file-access clients cannot update it, but user home directories would not be very useful if they could not be written to by their owners. The fileserver continues to employ user credentials to limit access as appropriate. Network file system clients follow file system referrals as applications encounter them, which is similar to how an automounter works. Consider the initial mount of the domain root as if you are mounting a single whole file system, even though underneath, additional NFS mounts come and go as needed. Options -f, --fake Fake mount. This option is ignored by mount.fedfs(8) but is passed to the underlying file system mount subcommand. -h, --help Print the mount.fedfs(8) usage message and exit. -n, --no-mtab Do not update /etc/mtab. This option is ignored by mount.fedfs(8) but is passed to the underlying file system mount subcommand. -o, --options options Specify mount options for this mount point and all submounts. These are ignored by mount.fedfs(8) but are passed to the underlying file system mount subcommand. For further details, refer to mount(8). -r, --ro, --read-only Mount the domain root and all submounts read-only. -s, --sloppy Tolerate unrecognized mount options. This is ignored by mount.fedfs(8) but is passed to the underlying file system mount subcom- mand. -v, --verbose Report more information during the mount process. This affects mount.fedfs(8) and is also passed to the underlying file system mount subcommand. -V, --version Print version information for mount.fedfs(8) and exit. -w, --rw, --read-write Mount the domain root and all submounts read-write. This is the default behavior. EXAMPLES
To mount the domain root of the example.net FedFS domain via NFS version 4 automatically, you might add this to your /etc/fstab: /nfs4/example.net /nfs4/example.net fedfs defaults 0 0 A FedFS domain root can also be mounted with a stand-alone invocation of mount(8): # mount -t fedfs /nfs4/example.net /mnt/fedfs This mounts the FedFS domain root for the example.net domain on the client's /mnt/fedfs directory. A simple # umount /mnt/fedfs unmounts it when you are finished with it. FILES
/etc/fstab filesystem table /etc/mtab table of mounted file systems SEE ALSO
fedfs(7), nfs(5), mount(8), mount.nfs(8) RFC 2782 for a discussion of DNS SRV records RFC 5661 for a description of NFS version 4 referrals RFC 5716 for FedFS requirements and overview COLOPHON
This page is part of the fedfs-utils package. A description of the project and information about reporting bugs can be found at http://wiki.linux-nfs.org/wiki/index.php/FedFsUtilsProject. AUTHOR
Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> 3 February 2014 MOUNT.FEDFS(8)
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