On Wednesday May 13 2009, Joachim Schrod wrote:
Randall R Schulz wrote:
On Tuesday May 12 2009, Manfred Hollstein wrote:
On Tue, 12 May 2009, 16:23:09 +0200, Randall R Schulz wrote:
Given an NFS share (server-side) and an fstab entry (client-side) that can be successfully mounted manually, what must be done on the cliet side to get that share mounted during reboot?
Also, can the directories be mounted if you're running "/etc/init.d/nfs start" manually later on?
To reiterate, it's only boot-time mounting that's not working. (I've stated this a few times, now, including in the quote you included above...)
I think Manfred's question was more nuanced. How do you mount manually later after boot? By calling "mount -a -t nfs" or even mounting the shares one by one? Or by calling "/etc/init.d/nfs start"? (That script does much more than just calling mount, so it could go wrong in other places.)
There's only one mount in question. I mount it by specifying the mount-point directory to the "mount" command: # mount /twain/repo/library The nfs (client) daemon / service is already running by the time I can log in. It's enabled in run levels 3 and 5. I did mention that.
That information was not given yet by you, AFAICS.
Joachim
Randall Schulz -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org