On 04/19/10 11:41 AM, lattera wrote:
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 10:26 AM, Tom Haynes <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 04/19/10 11:16 AM, Shawn Webb wrote:
Ah! You're right. NFS is mapping my user to the nobody user.
With both boxes being set to the same domain (0xfeedface.org
<http://0xfeedface.org>) via /etc/default/nfs, shouldn't NFS
map the user to the "shawn" account? Or is there some
configuration setting I'm missing?
I'm guessing that 192.168.2.6 is not properly in your name
servers. I.e.,
the fact that it has an IP and not a hostname.
Does that also mean that you don't have NIS or LDAP running on it?
Right. I'm not running NIS or LDAP. I'm using my ISPs default DNS
servers. Should I create a zone and set up DNS and LDAP?
No need if in /etc/passwd.
If so, is "shawn" defined in /etc/passwd ?
Yes, shawn is defined in /etc/passwd on both boxes. In fact, both
users on both boxes have the same UID.
I.e., if the server can not find a mapping for
"[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>"
via looking up "shawn", then it will use "nobody" as the owner.
If "shawn" is a valid user, then see of snoop show the client
sending [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> as the
owner...
snoop -o mount.scp shawn-desktop 192.168.2.6
I ran that snoop command, but it didn't really display anything. It
just displayed a number. The output:
sh...@sully:~$ pfexec snoop -o mount.scp shawn-desktop 192.168.2.6
Using device rge0 (promiscuous mode)
197 ^C
Yes, which is why you use the snoop command below to look at it.
Or you can just send the mount.scp to the list (or me) and I'll look at
it...
should limit it to just those two machines.
Then
snoop -v -i mount.scp > xxx
should give you human readable output. You can then look at the
results.
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