If you cannot work your way through the tiny little problem -- of
using options from an incompatible operation system -- there is little
hope for you in this field and you should probably go back to familiar
ground.

you will only receive crocodile tears from me.

> Theo said absolutely nothing useful ,  and as I said in my prior reply, I
> removed the config item he was moaning about and it had zero effect.
> 
> Thanks a bunch guys.  The openBSD community really sucks.
> 
> On Thursday, 8 September 2016, Raul Miller <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> > Perhaps re-read what Theo said, and do not stop and give up when you
> > get to the word "linux"?
> >
> > Good luck,
> >
> > --
> > Raul
> >
> > On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 9:46 AM, Bob Jones
> > <[email protected] <javascript:;>> wrote:
> > > So....any one care to give a more sensible suggestion than Theo's
> > > unnecessary anti-Linux rant ??
> > >
> > > On Monday, 5 September 2016, Theo de Raadt <[email protected]
> > <javascript:;>> wrote:
> > >
> > >> > OpenBSD 6.0 GENERIC.MP#0 amd64
> > >> >
> > >> > My fstab entry looks like :
> > >> >
> > >> > 10.10.10.10:/srv/share /mnt/ops_test nfs
> > defaults,noexec,nosuid,nodev,auto
> > >> 0 0
> > >> >
> > >> > However:
> > >> >
> > >> > $ doas mount /mnt/ops_test
> > >> > doas ([email protected] <javascript:;> <javascript:;>) password:
> > >> > mount: can't find fstab entry for /mnt/ops_test
> > >> >
> > >> >
> > >> > Any ideas  ?  That style of fstab entry seems to work fine on my linux
> > >> > boxes (albeit with nfs4 instead of nfs, but that makes no difference
> > >> > on openbsd).
> > >>
> > >> Well, openbsd is not linux.
> > >>
> > >> Have no idea what that word "defaults" in there means.

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