Is the new network location on the same subnet?  Check basic network
connectivity.  Next, check permissions on /afs.  Those are my two best
guesses.

        -- Garrett D'Amore

On Tue, 10 Sep 1996 18:47:43 +0100 (NFT)  Peo Mard wrote:

> Hi All,
> 
> Picture this: A sun LX workstation running SunOS 4.1.4/AFS 3.4a. Works fine.
> Someone decides to move this machine to another room. Same name, same IP.
> Switch off the power, move the unit, switch it back on. /etc/messages
> tells us that afsd fail to mount /afs. Scratching the /usr/vice/cache,
> no afsd in "ps -aux" listing, running afsd -verbose manually gives:
> ---
> *** Lots of messages ***
> afsd: Forking trunc-cache daemon.
> afsd: Mounting the AFS root on '/afs', flags: 4.
> afsd: Can't mount AFS on /afs(16)
> ---
> 
> Why? What happened? Any clues someone? To add to the confusion *some* of
> the mountpoints, or directories in the cell actually *are* precent. It *is*
> possible to enter the root.cell mountpoint, but all the dirs under that
> level arenempty. Other machines in the cell are OK. (in this regard)
> The machime was rebooted a couple of weeks ago and has been used after
> that reboot.
> 
> I'm clueless... Anyone seen this before? 
> 
> Thanks,
>   /peo
> 

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