nfs question

2003-10-20 Thread Chema Carballido
Hi! Could any user (not the root) mount a export with the command mount ? I use the insecure option on the export-options but doesn work. Thank you -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

nfs question

2003-10-05 Thread João Borsoi Soares
Hello list, I've set up a nfs server, and I was having a problem when booting the system. I was getting the following message: rpc.nfsd: nfssvc: Address already in use Well, I found out the problem. My server is a nfs server but also a nfs client (through netfs). Redhat setup application made

RE: nfs question

2003-08-22 Thread Go, Jeffrey
I believe rpc services need to be running as well... Check dependencies to be sure -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2003 12:06 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: nfs question What services are needed to export an ext3

nfs question

2003-08-21 Thread diego . veiga
What services are needed to export an ext3 driver? Does realy need this 3 services: nfs, nfslock and portmap? Thanks, Diego -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Re: NFS Question

2003-08-17 Thread Ritesh Raj Sarraf
use options like intr,soft to softmount ricky On Thursday 14 August 2003 20:29, Gerry Doris wrote: I sometimes manually mount NFS volumes on my internal lan. This works fine until the system containing the NFS volumes is rebooted or turned off. Once this happens I can't find a way to

RE: NFS Question

2003-08-16 Thread Bill Johnson
the NFS exports with the soft option? -Steve -Original Message- From: Gerry Doris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2003 10:00 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: NFS Question I sometimes manually mount NFS volumes on my internal lan. This works fine

RE: NFS Question

2003-08-14 Thread Rigler, Steve
] Subject: RE: NFS Question Is your client mounting the NFS exports with the soft option? -Steve In my /etc/exports file I just have the rw option. After that I manually mount the nfs volume by doing: mount -t nfs host:/home/gerry /mnt/nfs This successfully mounts host:/home/gerry

NFS Question

2003-08-14 Thread Gerry Doris
I sometimes manually mount NFS volumes on my internal lan. This works fine until the system containing the NFS volumes is rebooted or turned off. Once this happens I can't find a way to umount those volumes except rebooting the client machine. What is the correct way to get my client machine to

RE: NFS Question

2003-08-14 Thread Gerry Doris
Is your client mounting the NFS exports with the soft option? -Steve In my /etc/exports file I just have the rw option. After that I manually mount the nfs volume by doing: mount -t nfs host:/home/gerry /mnt/nfs This successfully mounts host:/home/gerry on the mount point /mnt/nfs. The

RE: NFS Question

2003-08-14 Thread Rigler, Steve
Is your client mounting the NFS exports with the soft option? -Steve -Original Message- From: Gerry Doris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2003 10:00 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: NFS Question I sometimes manually mount NFS volumes on my internal lan

Re: NFS question

2003-01-29 Thread Thomas E. Dukes
On Wed, 2003-01-29 at 01:38, Todd A. Jacobs wrote: On 28 Jan 2003, Thomas E. Dukes wrote: I can see the shared drive (in webmin), it just won't mount. Maybe you don't have permissions? How is the C$ (or whatever) share configured on XP? It is shared with both the network users and other

Re: NFS question

2003-01-29 Thread Thomas E. Dukes
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 22:52, Samuel Flory wrote: You can have a samba mount (or nfs mount) only for a directory, and any dirs under it. I guess you could export /. You may need special options to span filesystems and follow links. I tried mounting it as /, but it gives an error as

Re: NFS question

2003-01-29 Thread Todd A. Jacobs
On 29 Jan 2003, Thomas E. Dukes wrote: Maybe you don't have permissions? How is the C$ (or whatever) share configured on XP? I noticed that it doesn't add anything to smb.com but it does add to the fstab. Also, when I set it up with a user name and password, the user name and password

NFS question

2003-01-28 Thread Thomas E. Dukes
How do I mount a drive using NFS. I can mount any specific shared directory on my XP box but can't seem to do the whole drive. The drive itself is shared. Do I have to share each individual directory? TIA -- Palmetto Shopper http://palmettoshopper.com Serving all of South Carolina and beyond!

Re: NFS question

2003-01-28 Thread Bret Hughes
On Tue, 2003-01-28 at 20:26, Thomas E. Dukes wrote: How do I mount a drive using NFS. I can mount any specific shared directory on my XP box but can't seem to do the whole drive. The drive itself is shared. Do I have to share each individual directory? unless I am missing something, you

Re: NFS question

2003-01-28 Thread Thomas E. Dukes
After I sent that I thought I may have used the wrong terminology. I am using disk and network files systems under webmin to mount a directory through the network. I think its using samba. I can mount a shared directory, just can't figure out how to do the whole drive -- other than by

Re: NFS question

2003-01-28 Thread Samuel Flory
Thomas E. Dukes wrote: After I sent that I thought I may have used the wrong terminology. I am using disk and network files systems under webmin to mount a directory through the network. I think its using samba. I can mount a shared directory, just can't figure out how to do the whole drive

Re: NFS question

2003-01-28 Thread Todd A. Jacobs
On 28 Jan 2003, Thomas E. Dukes wrote: I can see the shared drive (in webmin), it just won't mount. Maybe you don't have permissions? How is the C$ (or whatever) share configured on XP? -- Of course I'm in shape! Round's a shape, isn't it? -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe

RES: NIS NFS Question

2002-08-14 Thread Flávio
:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Em nome de Todd E. Siuta Enviada em: segunda-feira, 12 de agosto de 2002 20:35 Para: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Assunto: NIS NFS Question I am looking for a little help. I am relatively new to the world of Linux and I have not been able to find an answer to a problem I am having. I have

NIS NFS Question

2002-08-13 Thread Todd E. Siuta
I am looking for a little help. I am relatively new to the world of Linux and I have not been able to find an answer to a problem I am having. I have setup NIS and NFS on a small network. The users are able to log in fine and their home directory and share directory are mounting as expected.

theoretical nfs question

2002-06-18 Thread daniel
is it possible to tunnel nfs through ssh? if so, how? _ daniel a. g. quinn starving programmer without law or compulsion, men would dwell in harmony - lau tzu, tao te ching: chapter xxxii ___ Redhat-list mailing

Re: theoretical nfs question

2002-06-18 Thread Brian Ashe
Hello daniel, Tuesday, June 18, 2002, 1:09:34 PM, you textually orated: d is it possible to tunnel nfs through ssh? d if so, how? Some questions best left for Google searches. ;) http://www.google.com/search?hl=enie=UTF8oe=UTF8q=tunnel+nfs+through+ssh Have fun, --

Re: theoretical nfs question

2002-06-18 Thread Keith Morse
On Tue, 18 Jun 2002, daniel wrote: is it possible to tunnel nfs through ssh? if so, how? I also have a reference to www.samag.com. You'll need to search on their website. ___ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: theoretical nfs question

2002-06-18 Thread Emmanuel Seyman
On Tue, Jun 18, 2002 at 01:11:59PM -0700, Keith Morse wrote: I also have a reference to www.samag.com. You'll need to search on their website. It was in #3, vol. 11 cover date March 2002. I'm afraid the article isn't availible via sam's website. Emmanuel

Re: theoretical nfs question

2002-06-18 Thread Keith Morse
On Tue, 18 Jun 2002, Emmanuel Seyman wrote: On Tue, Jun 18, 2002 at 01:11:59PM -0700, Keith Morse wrote: I also have a reference to www.samag.com. You'll need to search on their website. It was in #3, vol. 11 cover date March 2002. I'm afraid the article isn't availible via sam's

hypothetical nfs question (newbie)

2002-02-07 Thread daniel
just a quick hypothetical question: as i understand it, nfs allows linux boxes to mount another computer's directory structure onto the host machine, so my question is: how stupid/dangerous would it be to run a server from home running nfs so i could access it from work?

Re: hypothetical nfs question (newbie)

2002-02-07 Thread Tom Curl
Not a good idea at all Dan, unless you tunnel it through ssh or a VPN. Otherwise you risk a good chance that someone else can mount the volume you are exporting. Tom On Thu, 2002-02-07 at 17:11, daniel wrote: just a quick hypothetical question: as i understand it, nfs allows linux boxes to

Re: hypothetical nfs question (newbie)

2002-02-07 Thread Carey F. Cox
On Thu, 2002-02-07 at 16:25, Tom Curl wrote: Not a good idea at all Dan, unless you tunnel it through ssh or a VPN. Otherwise you risk a good chance that someone else can mount the volume you are exporting. Tom I'll second that. All of your files would be accessed in the clear, where

Re: hypothetical nfs question (newbie)

2002-02-07 Thread Alan Peery
daniel wrote: just a quick hypothetical question: as i understand it, nfs allows linux boxes to mount another computer's directory structure onto the host machine, so my question is: how stupid/dangerous would it be to run a server from home running nfs so i could access it from work?

Re: hypothetical nfs question (newbie)

2002-02-07 Thread Ed Wilts
how stupid/dangerous would it be to run a server from home running nfs so i could access it from work? Bluntly put, very stupid and dangerous. NFS is affectionately known to stand for No F*cking Security. Basically the protocol works by trusting the client. Since you can not trust the

Re: hypothetical nfs question (newbie)

2002-02-07 Thread David Talkington
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Ed Wilts wrote: how stupid/dangerous would it be to run a server from home running nfs so i could access it from work? Bluntly put, very stupid and dangerous. NFS is affectionately known to stand for No F*cking Security. Basically the protocol

NFS question

2000-10-30 Thread kwood
Hey there, got a question for you. I am setting up a cluster that requires a nfs mounted /home. I have the exports file setup correctly. /home (rw,no_root_squash) # Home mounted from server The problem I am having is that I had this setup working and the machines would mount /home

NFS Question

2000-10-27 Thread kwood
Hey there, question for you. I did a server install on a group of machine and then applied the updates. I am running RH6.2. The problem I have is that when the machine starts up, I get all the NFS daemons starting up, but when I do a ps ax, I get no listing. Also, when I restart the daemons

NFS Question

2000-05-25 Thread Kevin Wood
Hey there, got a question for you all: I have setup a cluster running RH 6.2. Each system mounts /home from the server. I have this added into the /etc/fstab as such: 192.168.0.250:/home/homedefaults1 1 I also have /home exported on the server as /home

NFS Question -FIXED!

2000-05-25 Thread Kevin Wood
It would appear that I needed to move the NFS daemon from S60nfs to S20nfs. For some reason with it loading sooner, it fixed the problem. Thought someone might be interested in what I found. Thanks -- Kevin Wood DCG Computers, Inc./Atipa Linux Solutions 850 East Industrial Park Drive Suite 8

Re: NFS Question

1998-04-24 Thread Keith Schoenefeld
Steve Curry wrote: Ok thanks ahead of time for reading this email. I would like to have a question about Linux NFS explain to me. It's in my understanding that if we(my company) have Linux with NFS and Samba installed, we can from say from a Win95/NT box install software to the Linux

NFS Question

1998-04-23 Thread Steve Curry
Ok thanks ahead of time for reading this email. I would like to have a question about Linux NFS explain to me. It's in my understanding that if we(my company) have Linux with NFS and Samba installed, we can from say from a Win95/NT box install software to the Linux hard drive and then