On Thursday 02 Mar 2006 12:49, John Jolet wrote:
snip
> mount -t smbfs //lkg5f.homenet.com/DISK 2 /mnt/someplace
>
> if the share is password protected, after the smbfs, add -o
> username=whatever,password=whatever
>
> only root will be able to do this. You might want to try to avoid
> spaces in your share names in the future...just makes things easier
> on the unix side.
I hace tried the above commands with and without username and password but all
I get is the usage message, no indication of an error.
Usage: mount -V : print version
mount -h : print this help
mount : list mounted filesystems
mount -l : idem, including volume labels
So far the informational part. Next the mounting.
The command is `mount [-t fstype] something somewhere'.
Details found in /etc/fstab may be omitted.
mount -a [-t|-O] ... : mount all stuff from /etc/fstab
mount device : mount device at the known place
mount directory : mount known device here
mount -t type dev dir : ordinary mount command
Note that one does not really mount a device, one mounts
a filesystem (of the given type) found on the device.
One can also mount an already visible directory tree elsewhere:
mount --bind olddir newdir
or move a subtree:
mount --move olddir newdir
A device can be given by name, say /dev/hda1 or /dev/cdrom,
or by label, using -L label or by uuid, using -U uuid .
Other options: [-nfFrsvw] [-o options] [-p passwdfd].
For many more details, say man 8 mount .
I was going to try Harry Putnam's solution of using cifs but it seems to me
that the commands are exactly the same except for the file system.
Any other ideas please
Paul
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