On Tuesday May 12 2009, Manfred Hollstein wrote:
On Tue, 12 May 2009, 16:23:09 +0200, Randall R Schulz wrote:
On Tuesday May 12 2009, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On Tuesday, 2009-05-12 at 06:43 -0700, Randall R Schulz wrote:
It seems like a routine thing, but I can't find any information.
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?
Is the nfs client service enabled to run at boot? Check with "chkconfig nfs" (config is /etc/sysconfig/nfs).
Yes, see my previous answer to Per. Well, there's no need. I just said "yes, in runlevels 3 and 5."
It may as well have to do with which kind of NFS server you're trying to mount from. I recently had troubles with some ancient True64 NFS server, which could be solved by adding mountproto=udp to the mount options. Perhaps you should describe details about the server, too. Also, can the directories be mounted if you're running "/etc/init.d/nfs start" manually later on?
It's another openSUSE 11.1 system configured using YaST, as well. Both are using v4 NFS. 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...)
HTH, cheers.
l8er manfred
Randall Schluz -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org