On 09/10/2016 08:04 AM, Bob Jones wrote:
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.
It does tend to get testy when someone like you doesn't read carefully
and doesn't follow the advice of experts trying to help.
What you said above -- "Theo said absolutely nothing useful" -- is the
crux of the problem. You also characterized what he said as "rant". You
are wrong on both counts. There was real information in "OpenBSD is not
Linux", something I'm surprised he needed to point out to you, but he
did. He was telling you that you were assuming that what you do in a
Linux fstab file will or should be valid in an OpenBSD fstab file, which
is not true, because the two systems are not the same.
You are also failing to realize that OpenBSD is one of the
best-documented OSes in existence. If you had taken the time to do the
sensible thing -- read the fstab man page -- it''s likely we wouldn't be
wasting network bandwidth on this.
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.