Ian Kent wrote:
> On Tue, 2007-09-11 at 16:46 +0930, Shane wrote:
>   
>> Hey All,
>>
>> I'm trying to get a "top-level" automount to work.  eg
>>
>> /home  -rw,vers=3,fstype=nfs,intr,hard,tcp,rsize=32768,wsize=32768
>> srv1:/export/home/
>>
>> I've tried a few things so far - putting that exactly as is into
>> /etc/auto.master, created an auto.direct file and put /- auto.direct
>> into auto.master neither any joy - also tried /home  auto.home in
>> auto.master and above but with * or / as the key as contents of
>> auto.home none are working.
>>     
>
> Not valid in auto.master.
>
> An indirect map must have keys that are a directory component only, that
> is no "/"s.
>
> So, in auto.master you can have:
>
> /home auto.home
>
> and auto.home as:
>
> *     srv1:/export/home/&
>
> to mount /home/myname as srv1:/export/home/myname
>
> You could leave out the "&" but I'm not sure that would be useful.
>
>   
>> Firstly is this actually possible?  Though I have no idea how Apple
>> translate our maps into something automount uses they do get around
>> this but /home is a symlink to somewhere like
>> /private/var/automount/home. If its possible ...what have I missed to
>> get this working?
>>     
>
> No, not possible with version 4.
>
> Single level indirect maps aren't possible by definition.
>
> Single level direct maps are possible with version 5.
>
> So, in auto.master you could have:
>
> /-    auto.home
>
> and auto.home:
>
> /home svr1:/export/home
> /other/dir    other:/export/other
>
> and the like.
>
> Ian
>
>   

Is there a good way to set up ldap entries so autofs 4 and 5 can each
find and match its own version of automount maps?

Many times, one has to run different versions of Redhat distributions
and not able to migrate to RHEL5 all together.

Simon

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