Let me say firstly that I am not an AIX expert. So what I am posting here now is just a generic Unix world response.
What have you tried already? You may already have tried this, but..................
NFS comes in 3 different currently available versions; version 2, 3 or 4.
Do you know which version the Windows hosted NFS for Unix is talking??
From the symptoms you are posting it seems likely that your issue is security based and the main differences between version 2, 3 and 4 are security performance/features.
Therefore, you need to know that each end of the NFS is talking the same language.
If you don't know the version that the Windows end is talking then no harm in trying your mount command with
included on the command line (see your mount man page) to explore whether (a) it's the same, (b) it doesn't work at all, or (c) it fixes the issue.
There are other things we can consider but this is the first thing to try if you haven't already.
Last edited by hicksd8; 04-24-2020 at 07:21 AM..
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to hicksd8 For This Post:
I am new in Ubuntu and i use Ubuntu 7.10, and have problem to mount automatic when i reboot computer,
Here is my /etc/fstab
192.168.0.91:/home/DATA/it /home/USER/usertest/Documents/Z nfs defaults 0 0
I try many option in that line, but the result is same, I cannot automatic mounting the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
Unix based,
My harddrive won't boot and I'm looking for a reliable tool
that can mount a hdd on Windows XP and show me the files
stored on a NFS system.
I tried the tool: Ext2IFS but this didn't work.
I found a lot of tools on google to mount nfs share thru a network
but that's... (1 Reply)
this is probably a bit dumb ...but i read somewhere that one of the nfs versions can be mounted on a windows 2003 server ..if yes ..does anyone know how this can be achieved (1 Reply)
Hi, How can i mount an NFS share on a solaris machine a filesystem ?
I have enabled nfs on a windows server and the shares has given read/write access to it to all the users. I would like to mount it on around 10 different solaris boxes with different versions of solaris.
Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a few Ubuntu 9.10 laptops I'm trying to learn NFS sharing with. I am just experimenting on this right now, so no harsh words about the security of what I'm playing with, please ;)
Below are the configs
/etc/exports on host
/home/woodnt/Homeschool... (2 Replies)
The UPS connected to the Disk Array portion of my Windows 2003 NAS burned up over the weekend. Reconnected it to a new UPS and re-booted the NAS box. Since then I have not been able to get my HPUX 10.2 box to mount the shared drives on the NAS. At boot, the NFS client & server subsystems do a... (0 Replies)
I am trying to set a share between windows and an AIX server. I was able to do this to a windows 2008 server. I am now trying to get this to worked on a windows 7 enterprise pc. below is what i get. I have turned off the firewall wall in windows the user is an admin in the pc. same account works... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
Is there a command or script which will push a file from Windows server to Linux box? using the mount command. I want the details or document of the whole process please.
I want this script to run every 30 minutes to push the file from windows to unix
Thanks (16 Replies)
I need a help of good people with effective bash script to mount nfs shared,
By the way I did the searches, since i haven't found that someone wrote a script like this in the past, I'm sure it will serve more people.
The scenario as follow:
An NFS Client with Daily CRON , running bash script... (4 Replies)
I have a Solaris 10 server, I'm trying to mount a share from a Windows nfs server. If I add this entry (tst-walnut:/test_sap_nfs - /majid nfs - yes rw,soft) to my /etc/vfstab, then I can mount, but when I create a file by root:root, the file owner changes to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Hiroshi
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
rpc.nfsd
rpc.nfsd(8) System Manager's Manual rpc.nfsd(8)NAME
rpc.nfsd - NFS server process
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/rpc.nfsd [options] nproc
DESCRIPTION
The rpc.nfsd program implements the user level part of the NFS service. The main functionality is handled by the nfsd kernel module. The
user space program merely specifies what sort of sockets the kernel service should listen on, what NFS versions it should support, and how
many kernel threads it should use.
The rpc.mountd server provides an ancillary service needed to satisfy mount requests by NFS clients.
OPTIONS -d or --debug
enable logging of debugging messages
-H or --host hostname
specify a particular hostname (or address) that NFS requests will be accepted on. By default, rpc.nfsd will accept NFS requests on
all known network addresses. Note that lockd (which performs file locking services for NFS) may still accept request on all known
network addresses. This may change in future releases of the Linux Kernel.
-p or --port port
specify a diferent port to listen on for NFS requests. By default, rpc.nfsd will listen on port 2049.
-N or --no-nfs-version vers
This option can be used to request that rpc.nfsd does not offer certain versions of NFS. The current version of rpc.nfsd can support
both NFS version 2,3 and the newer version 4.
-s or --syslog
By default, rpc.nfsd logs error messages (and debug messages, if enabled) to stderr. This option makes rpc.nfsd log these messages
to syslog instead. Note that errors encountered during option processing will still be logged to stderr regardless of this option.
-T or --no-tcp
Disable rpc.nfsd from accepting TCP connections from clients.
-U or --no-udp
Disable rpc.nfsd from accepting UDP connections from clients.
nproc specify the number of NFS server threads. By default, just one thread is started. However, for optimum performance several threads
should be used. The actual figure depends on the number of and the work load created by the NFS clients, but a useful starting point
is 8 threads. Effects of modifying that number can be checked using the nfsstat(8) program.
Note that if the NFS server is already running, then the options for specifying host, port, and protocol will be ignored. The number of
processes given will be the only option considered, and the number of active nfsd processes will be increased or decreased to match this
number. In particular rpc.nfsd 0 will stop all threads and thus close any open connections.
NOTES
If the program is built with TI-RPC support, it will enable any protocol and address family combinations that are marked visible in the
netconfig database.
SEE ALSO rpc.mountd(8), exports(5), exportfs(8), rpc.rquotad(8), nfsstat(8), netconfig(5).
AUTHOR
Olaf Kirch, Bill Hawes, H. J. Lu, G. Allan Morris III, and a host of others.
7 Aug 2006 rpc.nfsd(8)