[email protected] said: > To reiterate, the laptop (server) is 192.168.0.155 and the desktop (client) is > 192.168.0.146. Here is the error message again from the desktop (two lines, > wrapped):
> sudo mount -t nfs > 192.168.0.155:/media/jjj/Movies /media/jjj/Devil--Bonobo > mount.nfs: access denied by server while mounting > 192.168.0.155:/media/jjj/Movies > And also from the desktop: > showmount -e 192.168.0.155 > Export list for 192.168.0.155: > /media/jjj/Movies 127.0.0.1,192.168.0.0/255.255.255.0 > I take the mount.nfs error message as indicating a permissions problem, and > the second command as meaning that the desktop does at least see the share on > the laptop. > Also, on the laptop I did 'sudo chmod 777 /media/jjj/Movies.' And on both > computers I am jjj:jjj. Using the GUI I looked at the permissions for jjj:jjj > and they are the same on both computers. On the desktop I also tried the mount > command after doing sudo su to become root, but I still get the same error > message. > The error message certainly sounds like a permissions problem, but I don't > know what else to do. I am wondering if the mount.nfs error is a generic > message that the mount command gives regardless of what actually caused the > failure to mount. NFS version mismatch? What output do you get if you use "-v" with mount? Is there anything in any of the log files on either system? _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
