Dan Nicholson wrote these words on 01/28/07 11:17 CST:

> I don't use nfs, but out of curiosity I checked what the fedora
> bootscript does. It's roughly the same, using `killproc nfsd'. Of
> course, I don't know exactly what killproc does on fedora. The one
> difference I saw is that rpc.mountd is stopped first and then nfsd.
> This is the opposite of BLFS. You could try that and see what happens.

Using the current bootscripts, I don't see the issue any longer. The
nfs-server script has been changed (from the version I was using) and
now reads:

killproc nfsd HUP

and this works as it is supposed to.

-- 
Randy

rmlscsi: [bogomips 1003.26] [GNU ld version 2.16.1] [gcc (GCC) 4.0.3]
[GNU C Library stable release version 2.3.6] [Linux 2.6.14.3 i686]
11:23:00 up 18 days, 11:37, 1 user, load average: 0.31, 0.51, 0.56
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