On 04/23/2011 12:04 PM, Hal Vaughan wrote:
I don't have to use SMB, I could have the server use NFS as well, but
I can't find anything about reading an NFS share unless it's mounted.
As best I can tell, unless you use a program like smbclient, scp, ftp,
or rsync, there is no way to read any network share in Linux unless
it's mounted. To make a program on a non-local volume available
locally, you can either copy it to the local computer or mount the
share. At least that's the best I can find out. It's kind of tough to
Google this, since searches always turn up tutorials on how to mount a
volume.
I don't know how SMB work internally, but I wouldn't be surprised if
mounting were just a convenience to ease access to files on the remote
computer and to store credentials, but internally each access to a file
in under a cifs-mounted path is exactly the same as an access via
smbclient or other "mount-less" programs.
Anyway, what's the problem with mounting?
There is only one way to access files that all programs support: the
filesystem. So I think it is not possible to find a general solution to
your problem. Particular programs might have extra support, so it is
possible to include SMB in some program and then it will not have to
mount the remote directory. But that is specific to some program.
Specific libraries may have extra features. Gnome has (or at least had)
a "virtual filesystem", and I believe it has SMB support, so any program
using the Gnome API could transparently access SMB shares.
--
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
edua...@kalinowski.com.br
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