I don't have a physical box to put in the subnet right now.
This is for a school where we have 3 subnets: staff, students, and
servers. We have a router in place that limits access to certain ports
and IP addresses in the server subnet and the internet. Mainly to keep
the students from doing
I'm trying to work out some NFS issues at boot time. I'm getting the
still trying error message and it just hangs...
I'm working through this page on the wiki:
*http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/Troubleshooting-mount-problems*
Quick hardware fixes aren't going to happen. I don't have
Casey,
You don't need to access the /linuxrc script to modify the mount parameters.
Take a look at this wiki page:
http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/NFS#NFS_Server_not_responding
Basically, you can pass any nfs options you want, via the 'MOPTS' parameter.
Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 11:22:56AM -0600, Casey Woods wrote:
snip
I'm not doing any filtering that should affect anything. It's just
doing IP forwarding between subnets.
Doing any UDP forwarding? NFS uses UDP for it's work. That's probably
the root of your problem.
How are you handling
On 5/16/06, Scott Balneaves [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 11:22:56AM -0600, Casey Woods wrote:
snip
I'm not doing any filtering that should affect anything. It's just
doing IP forwarding between subnets.
Doing any UDP forwarding? NFS uses UDP for it's work. That's
I'm using a DHCP relay agent on the FreeBSD router. You don't need to
have a DHCP server in the same subnet as the thin clients if you're
relaying the DHCP requests to a DHCP server in another subnet. DHCP
wasn't the issue at all since I could get an IP and boot up via TPFT.
It was getting