10-22-2001
You question is not very clear, but mounting any kind of disk you need to be connected to THAT system. So, if you are talking about 'remote' the procedure is exactly the same after you login to the remote box.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I need some help in emergency. I want to add some software package from Solaris 10 CD remotely to UNIX Sparc machine. I can remotely access into the machine. Question is: how do I insert Solaris 10 CD in my laptop, then mount to UNIX machine remotely and add software package. Please give me the... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: duke0001
7 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi friends,
In my case, there are serveral PCs running Linux in a LAN.
I would like to to mount the directory /A_river of machine-A to the file system of another machine machine-B so that I can access files in that directory.
I do not know how to do this. The situation is complicated by... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cy163
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Is there a way to find if the file systems mounted on a AIX/Linux box is local or remote? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Un1xNewb1e
1 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I'm writing a korn shell script where the user enters a variable and I have to create a directory remotely which contains the name of that variable.
Example.
print 'Please enter variable:'
read variable
ssh user@host 'mkdir before_$variable;'
Thank you. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jangozo
4 Replies
5. Ubuntu
Unable to mount location Can anyone help with this please?
Since recently installing 12.04 from a downloaded live CD onto my desktop computer, I have been unable to re-establish a network connection with my other... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Royalist
2 Replies
6. Red Hat
how to create local mount point at startup
Filesystem GB blocks Free %Used Iused %Iused Mounted on
xxxxxxxx 370.00 180.08 51% 24500 1% /test (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthik9358
5 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
Can you help me ?
$7 fits to remote server.
I can launch the script from local or remote server.
I would like my_script.sh to choose local or remote command depending the variable $7.
Is the function f1 right or wrong ? In this moment, i can't test it.
Thanks in advance.
I create... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: amazigh42
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
I need to run a local shell script on a remote machine. I am able to achieve that by executing the command
> ssh -qtt user@host < test.sh
However, when I try to pass arguments to test.sh it fails.
Any pointers would be appreciated. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sree10
7 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I need a advice for writing simple bash script,
I have a file pod.txt which contains source location and remote location:
/mnt/infile/20141103/701_0001.png/remote/tmp/pk21730/p0330223723074.png
/mnt/infile/20141103/203_0001.png/remote/tmp/pk21731/p0330223723081.png
and I must copy ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: primo102
6 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I came across the scenario, that I need to copy files from the remote server to my local. The files in the remote server are created by another job and its keep on generating the files in that remote folder.
We can't able to use SCP command and we're using SFTP to connect the server and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Janarthan
3 Replies
rmtab(5nfs) rmtab(5nfs)
Name
rmtab - table of local file systems mounted by remote NFS clients
Description
The file resides in the directory and contains a list of all remote hosts that have mounted local file systems using the NFS protocols.
Whenever a client performs a remote mount, the server machine's mount daemon makes an entry in the server machine's file. The command
instructs the server's mount daemon to remove the entry. The -b command broadcasts to all servers and informs them that they should remove
all entries from created by the sender of the broadcast message. By placing a -b command in tables on NFS servers can be purged of entries
made by a crashed client, who, upon rebooting, did not remount the same file systems that it had before the system crashed. The file is a
series of lines of the form:
hostname:directory
Rather than rewrite the rmtab file on each request, the mount daemon comments out unmounted entries by placing a number sign (#) in the
first character position of the appropriate line. The mount daemon rewrites the entire file, without commented out entries, no more fre-
quently than every 30 minutes. The frequency depends on the occurrence of requests.
This table is used only to preserve information between crashes and is read only by when it starts up. The daemon keeps an in-core table,
which it uses to handle requests from programs like and
Restrictions
Although the table is close to the truth, it may contain erroneous information if NFS client machines fail to execute -a when they reboot.
Files
See Also
mount(8nfs), umount(8nfs), mountd(8nfs), showmount(8nfs), shutdown(8)
rmtab(5nfs)