> On Tue, 24 Sep 2013 22:50:47 +0300 (EEST) > "Jukka Tuominen" <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > That shouldn't be the problem here. What actual errors are you >> > seeing? Can you run 'fs lsm' on the things you can't seem to >> > access? (That is, 'services' and the homedirs) >> >> '/afs/[domain]/service' is a mount point for volume '#service' >> >> > fs: You don't have the required access rights on >> '/afs/[domain]/user/...' >> >> Also, >> fs la /afs/[domain]/service >> fs: You don't have the required access rights on '/afs/[domain]/service' > > Okay, I thought you meant they were just offline or something. If that's > the problem, then it probably is related to authentication; it seems > more like the authentication setup is broken, not related to the > migration. Are your tokens not working at all, then? (A way to test > would be to try writing to, say, a new file in /afs/.cell/ )
mkdir saids it cannot be done because it's readonly. > > Do you know what the permissions on these dirs are supposed to be? Access list for /afs/[old.domain]/service is Normal rights: system:administrators rlidwka system:authuser rl system:anyuser > > Do you see anything in syslog, or 'dmesg | tail' on the client when you > try to access these? Sorry, I need to switch back to the new server... br, jukka > >> > If you want to copy the data from a 'source' cell to a 'destination' >> > cell and you can have both available at the same time, you can use the >> > 'up' tool to copy the directory tree while preserving all of the >> > afs-specific information and avoiding endless loops. >> >> I understood the client pointing to two different domains with a >> single destiny. I can also switch between the two servers (old and >> new) one at the time, but I can't understand how the server can hold >> the two domains at once. When you destroy the krb data, or change the >> .confs, it only appears as one, AFAIK. Sorry... > > Sorry, I meant using two different actual machines for that scenario > (using 'up' to copy the data between the two cells). You'd need two > separate machines for that, or at least two different IPs, so it's not > relevant if you only have the one machine to work with. > > It may be possible to do that with one machine by setting up chrooted > servers bound to a different local IP, but... that's getting a bit > complex :) > > -- > Andrew Deason > [email protected] > > _______________________________________________ > OpenAFS-info mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info > _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info
