kill -STOP mountd-pid && kill -STOP nfsd-pid \ && fsck NFS-exported-mountpoint && \ kill -START nfsd-pid && kill -START mountd-pid
just a crazy idea, never tried it myself... I'd hate to be on an NFS client though ;-) Ast On Sat, Oct 19, 2013 at 06:33:59PM +0200, Hauke Fath wrote: > On Sat, 19 Oct 2013 17:56:02 +0200, Edgar Fuß wrote: > >> Removing the share from /etc/exports and HUPing mountd(8) only helps for > >> new mount requests, not existing mounts. > > > > What would happen to NFS clients in case I stop nfsd, remove the partition > > from /etc/exports and unmount it, then reload mountd and restart nfsd? > > There's probably people on this list more qualified to answer this than > I... ;) > > To my understanding (and educated guessing), the client has a valid NFS > file handle in this situation. So, from its POV, it looks like the > server has gone away away, and comes back. Why would it need to > re-claim its mount from mountd(8)? > > hauke > > -- > Hauke Fath <ha...@espresso.rhein-neckar.de> > Ernst-Ludwig-Straße 15 > 64625 Bensheim > Germany