I managed to figure it out.  nfs-lock doesn't seem to be starting through
systemd, and I'm not sure why.  I can start it using start manually, but
when I try to enable it to start on system load, it claims "No file or
directory".

On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Kelly Miller <lightsolphoe...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Let's see...
> The server is CentOS 6.  There's nothing fancy about the setup; rather
> than running an account sync like NIS or LDAP, I just make sure that both
> computers have the same users with the same user id's on both computers
> (it's a home network setup with both computers sitting right next to each
> other with a switch between them, so I can guarantee that).  I'm using the
> same fstab options I normally use: hard, intr, rsize=8192, wsize=8192, tcp,
> nfsvers=3 .  But for whatever reason, I get this message whenever I try to
> mount the drive.
>
> On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 12:54 PM, Jason L Tibbitts III <ti...@math.uh.edu>
> wrote:
>
>> >>>>> "KM" == Kelly Miller <lightsolphoe...@gmail.com> writes:
>>
>> KM> I just tried to mount my home folders using NFS as I usually do, but
>> KM> no matter what I get the error mount.nfs: requested NFS version or
>> KM> transport protocol is not supported.  Did something change in the
>> KM> Alpha of Fedora 22 to suddenly break NFS mounting?  I've tried a
>> KM> bunch of mount options, but nothing seems to work.
>>
>> I know that a kernel update in Fedora 21 broke kerberized NFS4 export
>> (on the server) when selinux is enabled, but I'm guessing that's not
>> your issue.  Perhaps you could provide more details.
>>
>>  - J<
>>
>
>
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