I changed the settings in /etc/dfs/dfstab of the nfs server to :
And now, I can write to that directory on the client(As user bscscx01). I also added the 'root' option as you suggested, however, I don't see any significant difference in the file created :
Before adding the root option on the server(above), I created a file in that directory (on the client) as user 'root', and the permission of the file was "65534:sys". After adding the root option, the permission was also the same.
How does the 'root' option in the command above help?
I would like to know if there is a command or set of commands that I can run to verify that there are no 'extraneous' nfs mounted filesystems on our server. I didn't see anything in doing a search on NFS.
We think that we may have some filesystems that are still nfs mounted when the link should... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have a backup script that backs up my system to a nfs mounted file system. The mount point on my local system is /backup.
I want my script to check whether the nfs file system is mounted on /backup before actually backing anything up. Even if the nfs file system was NOT mounted,... (2 Replies)
:confused:Hi all
When i see in the /var/adm/messages, i saw the following error
unix: NFS write error on host : Stale NFS file handle.
unix: (file handle: 45ca415 3e7 a0000 2c7f6 3ebfc25f a0000 2 3e49)
It is using sunOS 5.7. Is anybody know what is this error?
Is is related to any network... (2 Replies)
Hi,
For a new requirement, we are trying to use NFS mounted directory as the buffer (TMP_DIR) for untar.
Target OS- VxWorks
Host OS - Windows Embedded.
mounted a directory in wondows onto VxWorks.
During untar process of GNU we come across utime, for chaning the time stamp of the... (0 Replies)
My issue is I want an NFS share where I can write to the directory, but not list any of the files in there. (doesn't matter if someone knows the name can open the file).
Have an NFS export for example:
drwxrwxrw- 2 cranes staff 256 18 May 12:48 cranes
The export will only... (1 Reply)
Hi
We have two servers name A and B .
I have a folder "Share" on A was NFS mounted to "B" server.
I have set the ACL permissions using setfacl , so that both (One user from Server A and another user from Server B) users can read and write to the directory.
Both users can create the... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I created a nfs share in the server(Solaris 10) with the following command and also updated the dfstab file
share -F nfs -o rw=server_name2,anon=0 /to_share
And then in the client(solaris 10) added the following command to mount the share
mount -F nfs server_name1:/to_share... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I making a script to check nfs mount and unmount options.
After various findings, i didn't get any solution for that.
Can you please help me in making the script.
1) I have used,
if grep -qs '/var/JETSHARE' /proc/mounts; then
echo "It's mounted."
else
echo "It's not mounted.
... (2 Replies)
Oct 13 12:19:15 xyz nfs: NFS write error on host xyz: Stale NFS file handle.
Oct 13 12:19:15 xyz nfs: (file handle: 68000000 1bc5492e 20000000 377c5e 1ce9395c 720a6203 40000000 bdfb0400)
Oct 13 12:19:15 xyz nfs: NFS write error on host zyz: Stale NFS file handle.
Oct 13 12:19:15 xyz nfs: ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: psychocandy
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
share
share(1M)share(1M)NAME
share - make local resource available for mounting by remote systems
SYNOPSIS
share [-F FSType] [-o specific_options] [-d description] [pathname]
The share command exports, or makes a resource available for mounting, through a remote file system of type FSType. If the option -F FSType
is omitted, the first file system type listed in /etc/dfs/fstypes is used as default. For a description of NFS specific options, see
share_nfs(1M). pathname is the pathname of the directory to be shared. When invoked with no arguments, share displays all shared file sys-
tems.
-F FSType
Specify the filesystem type.
-o specific_options
The specific_options are used to control access of the shared resource. (See share_nfs(1M) for the NFS specific options.) They may be
any of the following:
rw
pathname is shared read/write to all clients. This is also the default behavior.
rw=client[:client]...
pathname is shared read/write only to the listed clients. No other systems can access pathname.
ro
pathname is shared read-only to all clients.
ro=client[:client]...
pathname is shared read-only only to the listed clients. No other systems can access pathname.
Separate multiple options with commas. Separate multiple operands for an option with colons. See .
-d description
The -d flag may be used to provide a description of the resource being shared.
Example 1: Sharing a Read-Only Filesystem
This line will share the /disk file system read-only at boot time.
share -F nfs -o ro /disk
Example 2: Invoking Multiple Options
The following command shares the filesystem /export/manuals, with members of the netgroup having read-only access and users on the speci-
fied host having read-write access.
share -F nfs -o ro=netgroup_name,rw=host1:host2:host3 /export/manuals
/etc/dfs/dfstab
list of share commands to be executed at boot time
/etc/dfs/fstypes
list of file system types, NFS by default
/etc/dfs/sharetab
system record of shared file systems
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
mountd(1M), nfsd(1M), share_nfs(1M), shareall(1M), unshare(1M), attributes(5)
Export (old terminology): file system sharing used to be called exporting on SunOS 4.x, so the share command used to be invoked as
exportfs(1B) or /usr/sbin/exportfs.
If share commands are invoked multiple times on the same filesystem, the last share invocation supersedes the previous--the options set by
the last share command replace the old options. For example, if read-write permission was given to usera on /somefs, then to give read-
write permission also to userb on /somefs:
example% share -F nfs -o rw=usera:userb /somefs
This behavior is not limited to sharing the root filesystem, but applies to all filesystems.
9 Dec 2004 share(1M)