Often lsof (list open files) will find the person. If they have no open files, it won't help, but it's worth a shot.
Kev. ----- Original Message ----- From: "J. Rafael S�nchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 3:01 PM Subject: Re: (clug-talk) mount command doesn't want to work - How to deal with? > Yeah, you're right. all is fine now. My mount and umount commands were using > the right local/remote switches and all. The problem what that there was > still one user that had cd'd into it. I missed it. I had to call around to > make sure that there were no users sitting on the shares or mount points. I > have found that when this is true, you are not allowed to umount. > > I guess, what I was thinking is beyond the 'having' the wrong commmands. > It's fine now. > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Nathanael Noblet" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 2:03 PM > Subject: Re: (clug-talk) mount command doesn't want to work - How to deal > with? > > > > > > On Tuesday, January 14, 2003, at 01:59 PM, J. Rafael S�nchez wrote: > > > > > Hey Guys, I'm hoping someone can give me a hand. > > > What do you do when you're trying to do an nfs mount and you can't > > > because > > > it says that... > > > # mount -t nfs remotehost:/remotemount/data /localmount/data > > > "mount: remotehost:/remotemount/data already mounted or > > > /localmount/data/ > > > busy" > > > > > > or, it tells you that it's not mounted when you od an > > > # unmount /remotemount/data > > > umount: /remotemount/data/: not mounted > > > > Wouldn't you want to do "umount /localmount/data"? > > > > -- > > Nathanael Noblet > > Gnat Solutions > > 4604 Monterey Ave NW > > Calgary, AB > > T3B 5K4 > > > > T/F 403.288.5360 > > C 403.809.5368 > > > > http://www.gnat.ca/ > > >
