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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Solaris 9 Home Directory, Two Machines Sharing a NAS Post 303024022 by hicksd8 on Thursday 27th of September 2018 04:25:08 AM
Old 09-27-2018
Reading MadeInGermany's post#5 I can see that he has a different perception of this problem than Jim and I.

So, questions:

Are both node 1 and node 2 both mounting the filesystem(s) on the NAS via NFS???

What type of NAS is this? Make/model?

Is this NAS intelligent enough to share NFS handles for filesystems AND control all file locking, file read/write, and file contention? If so, the NAS is itself acting as node 1 and your Solaris 9 machines are NFS clients node 2 and node 3, both mounting via NFS which is okay.

Question then is: When the filesystem(s) need checking/correcting, how is that done? Is the NAS capable of creating and formatting filesystem(s) itself, and running integrity checks?

Sorry for all the questions but MadeInGermany's post#5 has got me thinking that Jim and I have perhaps not comprehended the problem from your post#1 due to lack of detail.

Awaiting answers........

Last edited by hicksd8; 09-27-2018 at 06:23 AM..
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UMOUNT(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 UMOUNT(8)

NAME
umount -- unmount filesystems SYNOPSIS
umount [-fv] special | node umount -a | -A [-fv] [-h host] [-t type] DESCRIPTION
The umount command calls the unmount(2) system call to remove a special device or the remote node (rhost:path) from the filesystem tree at the point node. If either special or node are not provided, the appropriate information is taken from the list of filesystems provided by getfsent(3). The options are as follows: -a All the filesystems described via getfsent(3) are unmounted. -A All the currently mounted filesystems except the root are unmounted. -f The filesystem is forcibly unmounted. Active special devices continue to work, but all other files return errors if further accesses are attempted. The root filesystem cannot be forcibly unmounted. -h host Only filesystems mounted from the specified host will be unmounted. This option implies the -A option and, unless otherwise speci- fied with the -t option, will only unmount NFS filesystems. -t type Is used to indicate the actions should only be taken on filesystems of the specified type. More than one type may be specified in a comma separated list. The list of filesystem types can be prefixed with ``no'' to specify the filesystem types for which action should not be taken. For example, the umount command: umount -A -t nfs,hfs umounts all currently-mounted filesystems of the type NFS and HFS. (The -a option only unmounts entries in the /etc/fstab list.) -v Verbose, additional information is printed out as each filesystem is unmounted. NOTES
Due to the complex and interwoven nature of Mac OS X, umount may fail often. It is recommended that diskutil(1) (as in, ``diskutil unmount /mnt'') be used instead. SEE ALSO
unmount(2), getfsent(3), mount(8), diskutil(1) HISTORY
A umount command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. 4th Berkeley Distribution May 8, 1995 4th Berkeley Distribution
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