Re: [gentoo-user] forced unmounting.

2005-01-11 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Tue, 2005-01-11 at 18:46, Sascha Lucas wrote: > Hi > > > I have, incidentally, figured out why I couldn't unmount the drive. > > It was in the NFS export list. If I totally kill NFS, I can unmount > Do you really kill everithing? portmap etc... Try lazy umount. umount -l /dev/??? -- Ow

Re: [gentoo-user] forced unmounting.

2005-01-11 Thread Sascha Lucas
Hi I have, incidentally, figured out why I couldn't unmount the drive. It was in the NFS export list. If I totally kill NFS, I can unmount Do you really kill everithing? portmap etc... Sascha. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list

Re: [gentoo-user] forced unmounting.

2005-01-11 Thread afabian
I have, incidentally, figured out why I couldn't unmount the drive. It was in the NFS export list. If I totally kill NFS, I can unmount it. I'm still interested to know if there's a way to really force an unmount, though; FreeBSD's -f switch will unmount just about anything. -- Adam Fabian ([EM

Re: [gentoo-user] forced unmounting.

2005-01-11 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 03:47:25 -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Is there a way to absolutely force an unmount? I notice that the > umount command has an -f switch, but it doesn't seem to work. Try umount -l -- Neil Bothwick Yoda of the Borg am I. Futile, resistance is. Be assimilated, you wil

[gentoo-user] forced unmounting.

2005-01-11 Thread afabian
Is there a way to absolutely force an unmount? I notice that the umount command has an -f switch, but it doesn't seem to work. Is it limited to unreachable NFS file-systems? Is there a kernel option I need to get this switch working? I've killed every process accessing /dvd, as reported by fuse