Hello Mark,
2. After firing up Linux on the PC, I was able to determine that I needed to
at least activate the NFS daemons. So, I fired up nfsd from
/etc/rc.d/init.d/nfs and made appropriate links to that script in the
runlevel subdirectories.
You don't have to make these
Hi,
Pardon if these questions are contained in a FAQ somewhere; however, I'm
confused about some issues.
I installed Redhat 6.2 on one of our PCs here at work for the primary
purpose of serving out some directories to NT PCs via NFS (since most of
them have Hummingbird's NFS Maestro Solo
Have you tried adding this line to your /etc/hosts.allow:
ALL : 192.168.0.
I had to do this to get nfs working on our Linux network. The local IP
addresses of our Linux machines are all 192.168.0.x. Good luck,
Hidong
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Pardon if
At 17:04 02/08/00 -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Pardon if these questions are contained in a FAQ somewhere; however, I'm
confused about some issues.
I can understand that. Redhat ships with weird kernel NFS support and most
of the documentation refers to the "normal" NFS server (for