On Mon, 11 Jul 2016 18:07:23 -0700 Don Buchholz <[email protected]> dijo:
>(3) Try this command (as 'root'!) to see what the NAS is making > available to mount with the NFS protocol: > > showmount -e 192.168.0.101 Export list for 192.168.0.101: /volume1/Synology *.*.*.*,192.168.0.136,192.168.0.146,192.168.0.126 /volume1/Synology_NFS 192.168.0.126,192.168.0.146,192.168.0.101 Note that the above lists all kinds of attempts by me - adding IP addresses for my laptop (...126), desktop (...146) and even *.*.*.*, plus creating a second share Synology_NFS. All to no avail so far. I should add that I didn't notice that you said 'as root' so I ran it as jjj, and later as root. The results were the same. And seeing the results I amended my mount command to sudo mount -t nfs 192.168.0.101:volume1/Synology /media/jjj/Synology sudo mount -t nfs 192.168.0.101:volume1 /media/jjj/Synology But I still get 'access denied by server.' >(2) About your local mount point ... > I'd suggest: > mkdir /synology >/ ... makes a new mount //point/ Didn't make any difference, not that I expected it to. I have lots of things mounted in /media/jjj - USB drives mostly. I should add that I get the same results from my desktop computer (also Xubuntu 14.04). _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
