nfs mount
Brian D. McGrew
brian at visionpro.com
Fri Sep 16 20:40:23 UTC 2005
>From a command line do a 'ping <server_name> and see if that's
successful. I just dealt with this early today where I was getting a
server down. The server was up, DNS has the correct info and so did NIS
hosts but my _local_ hosts file had the wrong IP and therefore it was
unreachable.
If you get a response from the server ping, login to the server, do a
'ps -aux | grep nfs' and make sure that NFS is really running. Also, at
a command line on the server you can do an 'exportfs' and it will show
you what filesystems are exporting.
If all that looks good, try putting
/u01 *(sync)
In your /etc/exports file and restart NFS just to see if it's an
security issue hanging you up.
-brian
Brian D. McGrew { brian at visionpro.com || brian at doubledimension.com }
---
> Those of you who think you know it all,
really annoy those of us who do!
-----Original Message-----
From: fedora-list-bounces at redhat.com
[mailto:fedora-list-bounces at redhat.com] On Behalf Of Vijay A Raghavan
Sent: Friday, September 16, 2005 1:36 PM
To: fedora-list at redhat.com
Subject: nfs mount
I am trying to nfs mount one dir on the server to
another client.
Both on the server and client I restarted portmap,nfs
and autofs everything is restarting fine. In the
/etc/sysconfig/autofs file based on the suggestion of
few in this forum I have changed the localoptions to
udp on both the machines.
In the /etc/exports dir I have the folloing
/u01 192.105.12.10(rw,sync)
Where /u01 is the dir in the server and 192.... is the
ip of the client.
Both the machines run on FC-4 and I tried with
mount nfsver=2 option too but I get the server down
message.
Let me know if there is a solution to tackle this.
-Vijay
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