Leo Magallon wrote:
>
> Well, you can either move nfs from /etc/rc.d/init.d/ to another directory
> or delete it.
> Then on the command line kill the the portmap and the rpc process.
>
> Reijo Korhonen wrote:
>
> > I don't use NFS. My problem is that Linuxconf doesn't let me stop this
Perhaps the solution is more simple. Remove NFS completely.
I don't know what system is being used but on a RedHat system
rpm -e nfs-server will remove the entire server package.
Also - check to see if NFS has been added as a module within Linuxconf.
That can be found under Control Files & Systems ... Configure Linuxconf
Modules. Either disable the module or empty the line referencing it.
Hope this helps.
> > service. If I mark NFS unused in control panel and activate changes I
> > get error messages:
> >
> > S60nfs restart
> > rpc.nfsd: no process to killed
> > prc.mountd. no process killed
> >
> > This makes no sense. Why linuxconf is restarting NFS, if I don't use it
> > at all?
> >
> > This is not a big thing, but I get same errors every time I boot Linux
> > up, so it makes booting slower.
> > Is the only solution to configure NFS first (I haven't done it, because
> > I don't use NFS), activate it from Linuxconf and then deactivate NFS?
>
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