Problem was solved by turning off the NFS server installed on my Ubuntu boxes. 
Just forgot to do that.

Bryan McGuire
Senior Network Engineer
NewNet 66

918.231.8063
[email protected]



On Dec 27, 2011, at 8:01 AM, Adam Tygart wrote:

> Bryan,
> 
> If your mount command is resorting to version 4 of the nfs protocol by
> default, you need to force version 3.
> 
> Try this: mount -t nfs -o vers=3,tcp 192.168.1.100:/test-vol /mnt/glusterssd
> 
> --
> Adam
> 
> On Mon, Dec 26, 2011 at 10:54, Bryan McGuire <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hello,
>> 
>> I have a small distributed setup trying to test NFS.
>> Volume Name: test-vol
>> Type: Distribute
>> Status: Started
>> Number of Bricks: 2
>> Transport-type: tcp
>> Bricks:
>> Brick1: ubuntu3:/ssdpool/gluster
>> Brick2: ubuntu:/ssdpool/gluster
>> Options Reconfigured:
>> nfs.disable: off
>> auth.allow: 192.*
>> 
>> I am trying to mount via NFS from my CentOS 5.7 box using the following 
>> command.
>> mount -t nfs 192.168.1.100:/test-vol /mnt/glusterssd
>> 
>> and I get the following
>> mount: 192.168.1.100:/test-vol failed, reason given by server: Permission 
>> denied
>> 
>> How do I allow my client permission to mount via NFS?
>> 
>> Bryan McGuire
>> Senior Network Engineer
>> NewNet 66
>> 
>> 918.231.8063
>> [email protected]
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> Gluster-users mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> http://gluster.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users

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