Looks like you need to allow nfs through your firewall so that it can be
accessed
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device available from bmobile.
-Original Message-
From: James Corteciano ja...@linux-source.org
Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2010 00:17:04
To: CentOS mailing listcentos@centos.org
If it's giving him a file system error on the remote host it's NOT a
fw issue
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On Jun 17, 2010, at 12:22 PM, earlarami...@gmail.com wrote:
Looks like you need to allow nfs through your firewall so that it
can be accessed
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device
James Corteciano wrote:
Hi All,
This is the settings of my NFS server (192.168.10.55)
/etc/exports:
/nfs/iso 192.168.10.0/255.255.255.0(rw,sync)
http://192.168.10.0/255.255.255.0%28rw,sync%29
From the remote host, I mount it correctly. But when I write/create
On Thu, Jun 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, James Corteciano
ja...@linux-source.org wrote:
Hi All,
This is the settings of my NFS server (192.168.10.55)
/etc/exports:
/nfs/iso 192.168.10.0/255.255.255.0(rw,sync)
From the remote host, I mount it correctly. But when I write/create
Hi Boris,
[r...@server]# ls -ld /nfs/iso
drwxrwx--- 2 root apache 4096 Jun 18 00:46 /nfs/iso
Regards,
James
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 12:36 AM, Boris Epstein borepst...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Jun 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, James Corteciano
ja...@linux-source.org wrote:
Hi All,
This is the
Try turning off root_squash in your /etc/exports file...
Default NFS server behavior is to prevent root on client machines from
having privileged access to exported files. Servers do this by mapping the
root user to some unprivileged user (usually the user nobody) on the
server side. This is known
James Corteciano wrote:
Hi Boris,
[r...@server]# ls -ld /nfs/iso
drwxrwx--- 2 root apache 4096 Jun 18 00:46 /nfs/iso
as I said, root squash in action.
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