Don,
Sounds like bad NFS karma... (that's a joke)
To debug this, I would copy /etc/rc.d/init.d/nfs to /tmp for
safekeeping, and delete /etc/rc.d/init.d/nfs. Then I'd restart the
server, which should come right up, without NFS. Then I'd start NFS by
hand, as in:
service NFS start
and assuming it hangs or fails, I'd tail /var/log/messages and see if
there's an interesting error message... that's what I'd do... let the
mailing list know what you find.
Rich
Richard Ferri
IBM Linux Technology Center
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
845.433.7920
On Fri, 2002-02-22 at 19:12, Don McLaughlin wrote:
> This may not be an Oscar question but -
>
> I installed Oscar 1.2.1 on a cluster of 4 clients and one server - all P166 with 32
>mb memory, Red Hat 7.1
> I had a few problems (had to replace libappconfig-perl with one for i586 and omit
>the install of LAMMPI. With a little futzing around I got it to work. However,
>
> After getting it work and successfully running the test suite, I shut it down and
>restarted it. Now, the server fails its boot will trying to start the NFS service.
>It gets to the point in the boot where it says Starting NFS service: and will not go
>further.
>
> Anyone have an idea what the problem is?
>
> Don McLaughlin
>
> Don McLaughlin
> Director,
> Office of Academic Computing
> West Virginia University
> G-7 Evansdale Library
> P.O. Box 6502
> Morgantown, WV 26506
>
> Phone: 304-293-2900
> Fax: 304-293-7677
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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