12-09-2002
You can edit /etc/fstab (and perhaps reboot).
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Dear Guy's
I'm making script to easier my work to mount and unmount some file systems
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Hi,
I know that if we need to unmount a device, we use the command umount mount-point, example 'umount /tmp/mount1'
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Dear all,
I have a two hard drive.On the second (/dev/sdb1 and /dev/sdb2) hard drive i have two partitions. The /dev/sdb2 has been mounted on the /home2 directory.I want to unmount that /dev/sdb2.I have no idea to how to do it.Can anybody give me the details about that?.
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Hi all,
I have a requirement to do an upgrade. As part of that upgrade I have to unmounts files in the fstab (there could be 100's), is there a way I can do this via script? The problem is, is that the mount points on every server will be different....
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rmtab(4) File Formats rmtab(4)
NAME
rmtab - remote mounted file system table
SYNOPSIS
/etc/rmtab
DESCRIPTION
rmtab contains a table of filesystems that are remotely mounted by NFS clients. This file is maintained by mountd(1M), the mount daemon.
The data in this file should be obtained only from mountd(1M) using the MOUNTPROC_DUMP remote procedure call.
The file contains a line of information for each remotely mounted filesystem. There are a number of lines of the form:
hostname:fsname
The mount daemon adds an entry for any client that successfully executes a mount request and deletes the appropriate entries for an unmount
request.
Lines beginning with a hash (' #') are commented out. These lines are removed from the file by mountd(1M) when it first starts up. Stale
entries may accumulate for clients that crash without sending an unmount request.
FILES
/etc/rmtab
SEE ALSO
mountd(1M), showmount(1M)
SunOS 5.10 15 Nov 1990 rmtab(4)