Actually, with C6, too. We've been fighting a problem with a server with a
RAID appliance that's having issues. It's also serving /home/* and project
directories for one team. What happens is when the issues happen, NFS on
the other servers they use, of course, gags with timeouts.
Now, my question
James A. Peltier wrote:
>
> Peter Arremann wrote:
> > On Monday 24 September 2007, Steven Haigh wrote:
> >
> >> Quoting Dan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >> NFS uses the user ID of the user (UID) for permissions.
> You will need
> >> to have the correct permissions on each system, and the correct
> >
Peter Arremann wrote:
On Monday 24 September 2007, Steven Haigh wrote:
Quoting Dan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
NFS uses the user ID of the user (UID) for permissions. You will need
to have the correct permissions on each system, and the correct
username associated with the same UID on each machine.
Thanks for all the suggestions! As this is for a simple home rollout ldap
and NIS are a little over the top. If it were a big picture item I would
definitely choose ldap.
I found in order for this to work I had to cp the /etc/passwd and /etc/group
to the local machine that is connecting to the
Peter Arremann wrote:
>
> On Monday 24 September 2007, Steven Haigh wrote:
> > Quoting Dan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > NFS uses the user ID of the user (UID) for permissions. You
> will need
> > to have the correct permissions on each system, and the correct
> > username associated with the same UID
> Good answer but I can't agree on the NIS part.. NIS is plain text over the
> network and is deprecated for a long time. Sun is talking about dropping
> support, HP the same and even in the Linux camp there is some talk about
> taking NIS support out of the standard distributions.
> Add to that th
On Monday 24 September 2007, Steven Haigh wrote:
> Quoting Dan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> NFS uses the user ID of the user (UID) for permissions. You will need
> to have the correct permissions on each system, and the correct
> username associated with the same UID on each machine.
>
> If you are runni
Quoting Dan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
But when I try to login as that user I got the dreaded:
"User's $HOME/.dmrc file is being ignored. This prevents the default
sessionand languages from being saved. File should be owned by user and have
644 Permissions. User's $HOME directory must be owned by user
I am currently running K12LTSP on Centos 5, which is working well but
without sound on most machines(ok all). So in order to remedy this and the
cd-burning issue I have decided to try to install CentOS locally on one
machine and then apply the personalizations via NFS.
Steps:
I editted the /etc/e
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