On Wed, 2009-05-13 at 06:59 -0700, Randall R Schulz wrote:
On Wednesday May 13 2009, Roger Oberholtzer wrote:
On Wed, 2009-05-13 at 06:06 -0700, Randall R Schulz wrote:
Just to summarize what works (for me:):
In my /etc/fstab, I mount NFS volumes at boot. My entries are like this:
source:/vol1 /source/vol1 nfs defaults,rsize=8192,wsize=8192,bg,soft,intr,noatime 0 0
Do you have NFSv4 enabled? ...
Yes.
You do not have the bg and intr flags. I would have them in a mount that happens during boot. As the lack of these has, in the past, make system not complete booting, perhaps there is a check by the mount command to see that any mounts without these are skipped so they do not hang the boot process. It surely could not hurt to add them. Sorry if this has already been asked, but in /etc/rcd.d/nfs, there is a bit of code like: if test "$nfs" = yes ; then mount -at nfs,nfs4 > /dev/null 2>&1 fi What happens if you add two lines, like: if test "$nfs" = yes ; then mount -at nfs,nfs4 > /dev/null 2>&1 stat=$? echo "RRS test: NFS mount returned $stat" >>/tmp/rrs_nfs.log fi What is in /tmp/rrs_nfs.log ? Is the file even created? -- Roger Oberholtzer OPQ Systems / Ramböll RST Ramböll Sverige AB Krukmakargatan 21 P.O. Box 17009 SE-104 62 Stockholm, Sweden Office: Int +46 8-615 60 20 Mobile: Int +46 70-815 1696 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org