In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Pete Templin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I'm getting lambasted by our network administration for killing a
subnet with NFS traffic.
Hmm.
Before he and I discuss the future of my
machines, I'm trying to clean up whatever mess I can, so my machines can
Hi,
I also noticed this a while ago and found the answer from
/usr/src/linux/fs/nfs/README. The nfsiod processes are started by the kernel
with the nfs services. There's more about the subject in the README, I hope
this helps.
[delete]
What script starts the four nfsiod's that are on
On Thu, 09 Jan 1997 11:47:16 EST Pete Templin ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
What script starts the four nfsiod's that are on my stock, Debian
1.2 system (not upgraded from 1.1, but not necessarily 1.2.1)? How can I
prevent them from even starting at boot time?
These are kernel threads.
On Thu, 09 Jan 1997 11:47:16 EST Pete Templin ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
What script starts the four nfsiod's that are on my stock, Debian
These are kernel threads. They're automatically started by the kernel when
needed. If you don't want them, then don't use your machine as a NFS
Hi all,
I'm getting lambasted by our network administration for killing a
subnet with NFS traffic. Before he and I discuss the future of my
machines, I'm trying to clean up whatever mess I can, so my machines can
hide away on his network management station. Which brings me to the
Hi all,
I'm getting lambasted by our network administration for killing a
subnet with NFS traffic. Before he and I discuss the future of my
machines, I'm trying to clean up whatever mess I can, so my machines can
hide away on his network management station. Which brings me to
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