Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-11-12 Thread hw
"Denniston, Todd A CIV NAVSURFWARCENDIV Crane, JXVS" writes: >> -Original Message- >> From: hw [mailto:h...@adminart.net] >> Sent: Monday, October 30, 2017 12:02 PM >> To: CentOS mailing list >> Subject: Re: [CentOS] home on nfs >> >>

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-11-05 Thread Patrick Bégou
Thanks Pete and James for pointing to this detailed page on NFS. I was unable to find this from google and now I clearly understand why these files occur. Patrick ___ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/cen

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-11-04 Thread James Pearson
Patrick Bégou : > > About NFS home directories and CentOS have you .nfsx tempory > files located in the home of your user ? > I have this very often. I was not able to found any documentation about > this but if they are temporary files for NFS transactions is there a way > to store them on

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-11-04 Thread Pete Biggs
> About NFS home directories and CentOS have you .nfsx tempory > files located in the home of your user ? > I have this very often. I was not able to found any documentation about > this but if they are temporary files for NFS transactions is there a way > to store them on on local clie

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-11-04 Thread Patrick Bégou
hw a écrit : Hi, I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda works fin

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-11-01 Thread Peter Kjellström
On Mon, 30 Oct 2017 17:02:08 +0100 hw wrote: > Jonathan Billings writes: > > > On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw wrote: > >> > >> Jonathan Billings writes: > >> > On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw wrote: > > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs serve

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-31 Thread Denniston, Todd A CIV NAVSURFWARCENDIV Crane, JXVS
> -Original Message- > From: hw [mailto:h...@adminart.net] > Sent: Monday, October 30, 2017 12:02 PM > To: CentOS mailing list > Subject: Re: [CentOS] home on nfs > > Jonathan Billings writes: > > > On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw wrote: >

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-30 Thread hw
Jonathan Billings writes: > On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw wrote: >> >> Jonathan Billings writes: >> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw wrote: Hi, I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a client. When the user logs in, they end up in t

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-29 Thread Jonathan Billings
On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw wrote: > > Jonathan Billings writes: > >>> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw wrote: >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a >>> client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather >>> than in th

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-29 Thread hw
Jonathan Billings writes: >> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a >> client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather >> than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. >>

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-28 Thread Jonathan Billings
> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw wrote: > > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-28 Thread hw
Cameron Smith writes: > There are seven fields on each line in a typical Linux "/etc/passwd" file. > > For a line that looks like this: > root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash > > 1. root: Account username. > 2. x: Placeholder for password information. The password is obtained from > the "/etc/shadow"

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-28 Thread hw
John Hodrien writes: > On Fri, 27 Oct 2017, hw wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a >> client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather >> than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. >> >> The user can

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-28 Thread hw
Louis Lagendijk writes: > On Fri, 2017-10-27 at 16:21 +0200, hw wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on >> a >> client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory >> rather >> than in their actual home directory and need to cd into

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-28 Thread hw
m.r...@5-cent.us writes: > hw wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a >> client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather >> than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. >> >> The user can read and write to t

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-27 Thread Cameron Smith
There are seven fields on each line in a typical Linux "/etc/passwd" file. For a line that looks like this: root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash 1. root: Account username. 2. x: Placeholder for password information. The password is obtained from the "/etc/shadow" file. 3. 0: User ID. Each user has a u

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-27 Thread Louis Lagendijk
On Fri, 2017-10-27 at 16:21 +0200, hw wrote: > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on > a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory > rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and writ

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-27 Thread m . roth
hw wrote: > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda wo

Re: [CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-27 Thread John Hodrien
On Fri, 27 Oct 2017, hw wrote: Hi, I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. The user can read and write to their home directory, so

[CentOS] home on nfs

2017-10-27 Thread hw
Hi, I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda works fine --- but only