i use this in my /etc/fstab
/tmp/ns.quanstro.:0/acme /home/quanstro/9/acme 9P
uid=1000,user,name=quanstro,proto=unix,noauto 0 0
/tmp/ns.quanstro.:0/upasfs /home/quanstro/9/upasfs 9P
uid=1000,user,name=quanstro,proto=unix,noauto 0 0
/tmp/ns.quanstro.:0/sources /home/quanstro/9/sources 9P
uid=1000,user,name=quanstro,proto=unix,noauto 0 0
/tmp/ns.quanstro.:0/tapefs /home/quanstro/9/tapefs 9P
uid=1000,user,name=quanstro,proto=unix,noauto 0 0
/tmp/ns.quanstro.:0/dns /home/quanstro/9/dns 9P
uid=1000,user,name=quanstro,proto=unix,noauto 0 0
this allows me (without becoming root or having v9fs) to
; mount $home/9/acme
assuming that acme is running and my current namespace is the default.
- erik
On Thu Jul 27 17:58:11 CDT 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I had 9P mounting working but the v9fs (9P) module has vanished from
> my Linux machine. As root, I invoked the equivalent in C of
>
> mount -t 9P -o proto=fd,name=$LOGNAME,rfdno=%d,wfdno=%d '' /n/remote
>
> where %d is the file descriptor to communicate with the 9P server.
> The more common usage is
>
> mount -t 9P -o name=geoff 10.240.55.178 /n/remote