I don't know. I suspect there is a reluctance to kill a mount when the
remote machine is not responding, which may just be a temporary problem
with the network or remote machine.
Joel
On Wed, Jun 18, 2003 at 09:14:57PM -0700, Jake Johnson wrote:
> Thanks but isn't there a better way? Wouldn't i
Thanks but isn't there a better way? Wouldn't it be a nice benefit if the
mount points could be unmounted even if they were lost (especially since windows
machines go down all the
time)?
Regards,
Jake Johnson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
P
I have just used kill -15 pid of the smbmount process.
You might need -9.
Joel
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How can I kill a mounted windows share that has been removed. I
get this problem a lot since I am always rebooting the windows machines
and I can't unmount the smbfs. Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Jake Johnson
http://www.plutoid.com
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