Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Solaris 9 Home Directory, Two Machines Sharing a NAS Post 303024027 by Stellaman1977 on Thursday 27th of September 2018 10:02:51 AM
Old 09-27-2018
Thanks- I checked machine 1 only (since I have 2 shut down right now)
Code:
/etc/mttab

shows nfs for the NAS mounts.

Its an Iomega StorCenter ix4-200d

I don't know if its intelligent enough to share handles, but I can say, that most users uids on machine 2 had already been made to match those of machine 1. I create accounts locally on each machine.

I know I can log in to the NAS via a browser and create shares and typically, users generally create directories from the windows machines.

Does this help?

------ Post updated at 10:02 AM ------

Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
Clarification:

We have two boxes. Box 1 is parent. Box 1 owns the filesystem. Box1 shares the filesystem via NFS or samba or whatever. Box 1 does not care who connects to the filesystem and then remote mounts it - via NFS. So you really have a proxy acting in box 1 in its very own kernel space when a request comes over the network. Box 1 controls entirely the NFS mounted disk, because it is actually physically mounted on box 1, not box 2.
Even though I moved the files off of Box 1 and on to the NAS?

Physically mounted? Box 1, Box 2, and the NAS are all connected through the switch. Box 1 and box 2 mount the NAS in exactly the same way as far as I can tell.

Does this change anything?
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. HP-UX

sharing a directory

Im trying to simply share a directory on one unix server and mount that share on a different unix server. There is no "share" command like on sun. What is the command to create a share on HP-UX? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bski
2 Replies

2. IP Networking

Printer Sharing on a Mixed(Windows/Linux) Home Network

Sometimes you get the tiger...but sometimes he get you and this latest home network “project” of mine has gnawed on me pretty badly. Perhaps you can offer some technical help. It will be heartily appreciated. I have a small home network initially comprising two computers running Windows... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Annatar
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Mounting NAS Drive on solaris

Hi, Im running 32-bit solaris on sparc. We have a NAS(Network attached drive), with its IP address, username and password. I'd like to be able to mount it on the solaris machine, and unmount it. The best possibility would be able to mount it simulataneously on 2 or more systems. Please... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: 0ktalmagik
9 Replies

4. Solaris

NISuser home directory movement in Solaris

How to move home directory of NIS user from one system to another system in Solaris. Thanks & Regards Durgaprasad (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: durgaprasadr13
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ssh autologin issue when both machines are having same ~home directory

Hi, I have two machines. M1 and M2 and having a generic id catadm, these two machines having common mount of /u/catadm directory. with this setup, ssh autologin is failing for me and asking me to enter password when i try autologin using this generc id from M1 to M2 catadm-M1$ ssh... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rbalaj16
3 Replies

6. Solaris

Sharing a local disk between to solaris machines

Hi, I recently added a disk on a solaris 9 and I wanted to make it accessible for another machine, using the same name here is what i did : On the machine holding the internal disk in vfstab i added the line /dev/dsk/c1t1d0s4 /dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s4 /SHARED2 ufs 2 yes ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zionassedo
2 Replies

7. Solaris

NFS with a NAS: permanently inconsistent directory state across clients

Hi, I am having some NFS directory consistency problems with the below setup on a local (192.) network: 1. Different permissions (chmod) for the same NFS dir are reflected on different clients. 2. (more serious) an NFS dir created on client1 cannot be accessed on client2; this applies to some... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cosmojetz
10 Replies
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)					      System Manager's Manual						RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)

NAME
rlm_ippool_tool - dump the contents of the FreeRadius ippool database files SYNOPSIS
If an ipaddress is specified then that address is used to limit the actions or output. rlm_ippool_tool [-a] [-c] [-o] [-v] session-db index-db [ipaddress] Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress rlm_ippool_tool -n session-db index-db ipaddress nasIP nasPort Update old format database to new. rlm_ippool_tool -u session-db new-session-db DESCRIPTION
rlm_ippool_tool dumps the contents of the FreeRADIUS ippool databases for analyses or for removal of active (stuck?) entries. Or with the -n argument adds a usage entry to the FreeRADIUS ippool databases. OPTIONS
-a Print all active entries. -c Report number of active entries. -r Remove active entries. -v Verbose report of all entries. -o Assume old database format (nas/port pair, not md5 output). -n Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress. -u Update old format database to new. EXAMPLES
Given the syntax in the FreeRadius radiusd.conf: ippool myippool { range-start = 192.0.2.0 range-stop = 192.0.2.255 [...] session-db = ${raddbdir}/ip-pool.db ip-index = ${raddbdir}/ip-index.db } To see the number of active entries in this pool, use: $ rlm_ippool_tool -c ip-pool.db ip-index.db 13 To see all active entries in this pool, use: $ rlm_ippool_tool -a ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.0.2.5 192.0.2.82 192.0.2.244 192.0.2.57 192.0.2.120 192.0.2.27 [...] To see all information about the active entries in the use, use: $ rlm_ippool_tool -av ip-pool.db ip-index.db NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2e8 - ipaddr:192.0.2.5 active:1 cli:0 num:1 NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x17c - ipaddr:192.0.2.82 active:1 cli:0 num:1 NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x106 - ipaddr:192.0.2.244 active:1 cli:0 num:1 NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x157 - ipaddr:192.0.2.57 active:1 cli:0 num:1 NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2d8 - ipaddr:192.0.2.120 active:1 cli:0 num:1 NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x162 - ipaddr:192.0.2.27 active:1 cli:0 num:1 [...] To see only information of one entry, use: $ rlm_ippool_tool -v ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.0.2.1 NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x90 - ipaddr:192.0.2.1 active:0 cli:0 num:0 To add an IP address usage entry, use: $ rlm_ippool_tool -n ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.0.0.1 172.16.1.1 0x90 rlm_ippool_tool: Allocating ip to nas/port: 172.16.1.1/144 rlm_ippool_tool: num: 1 rlm_ippool_tool: Allocated ip 192.0.2.1 to client on nas 172.16.1.1,port 144 SEE ALSO
radiusd(8) AUTHORS
Currently part of the FreeRADIUS Project (http://www.freeradius.org) Originally by Edwin Groothuis, edwin@mavetju.org (http://www.mavetju.org) Mailing list details are at http://www.freeradius.org/ RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:43 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy