the mounted folder) I can see this file afterwards only on the
initiator, but not on the target. Means, I open a Terminal on the
The basic rule is that if you are going to export storage to a single
machine, use iSCSI. If you need shared storage, use NFS instead.
You could consider a shared
Ouch! You are doing disk sharing via iSCSI, and you are using a non-cluster
filesystem? Ouch!
Lucky that the pieces are not flying around your head already (i.e. kernel
panic, data corruption)
Regards,
Ulrich
>>> Adnan Pasic schrieb am 12.05.2011 um 13:10 in Nachricht
<0cccb82e-bdf5-483a-b6f
On 2011. May 12. 13:10:10 Adnan Pasic wrote:
> the problem I am having is, that luckily I was able to correctly set-
> up the whole iSCSI-environment, the disk is successfully mounted on my
> initiator and everything seemed to be as expected.
> However, when I now copy a file from the initiator to
Hello,
the problem I am having is, that luckily I was able to correctly set-
up the whole iSCSI-environment, the disk is successfully mounted on my
initiator and everything seemed to be as expected.
However, when I now copy a file from the initiator to the target (via
the mounted folder) I can see