HA! that was it. dolt! thank you. i was going crazy looking at other
stuff.
-matt
-------
Matt Hodson
Scientific Customer Support, Geospiza
(206) 633-4403, Ext. 111
http://www.geospiza.com
On Nov 3, 2010, at 11:26 AM, Vikas Gorur wrote:
On Nov 3, 2010, at 11:18 AM, Matt Hodson wrote:
I just installed distributed gluster FS on 2 CentOS 5 boxes.
install and configuration seemed to go fine. gluterd is running.
firewalls/iptables are off. however for the life of me i cannot
nfs mount the main gluster server from either a OSX or a CentOS 5
box. I use NFS often and have a fair amount of experience with it
so i've reviewed most of the common pitfalls.
here's the command that fails from centos:
$ sudo mount -v -t nfs 172.16.1.76:/gs-test /mnt/gluster/
mount: trying 172.16.1.76 prog 100003 vers 3 prot tcp port 2049
mount: trying 172.16.1.76 prog 100005 vers 3 prot udp port 909
mount: 172.16.1.76:/gs-test failed, reason given by server: No such
file or directory
and the same one from OSX 10.5
sudo mount -v -t nfs 172.16.1.76:/gs-test /gluster/
mount_nfs: can't access /gs-test: No such file or directory
what's weird is that i can mount actual dirs on the gluster server,
just not the gluster VOLNMAE. in other words, this command works
fine because it's mounting an actual dir.
$sudo mount -v -t nfs 172.16.1.76:/ /mnt/gluster/
You have the kernel NFS service running. That is why you can mount
regular directories on the gluster server.
When you try to mount Gluster the kernel NFS server is actually
looking for a directory called /gs-test, which ofcourse does not
exist. You need to stop the kernel NFS service and stop and start
the gluster volume.
------------------------------
Vikas Gorur
Engineer - Gluster, Inc.
------------------------------
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