Well, I can give it a shot, I've never actually used FC2...

> What needs to be done is (AFAIK) opening up ports :
> 111 for portmap
> 2049 for rpc.nfsd

Use the system-config-securitylevel program to open ports on the
firewall.

> AND... making sure that
> rpc.statd uses a fixed port ex. 4000
> rpc.lockd uses a fixed port ex. 4001
> and rpc.mountd uses a fixed port ex 4002
> (I don't use quota's so no need to look at rpc.rquotad)

No idea on that one, sorry.

> Now the question is how is this done with FC2?
> I found this how-to, but most of the file references are incorrect and thus useless.
> http://www.lowth.com/LinWiz/nfs_help.html

Maybe take a look at
http://www.vanemery.com/Linux/NFSv4/NFSv4-no-rpcsec.html for information
specific to FC2.

> The
> Edit /etc/init.d/nfslock

This file is included in the nfs-utils package. It should be located at
/etc/rc.d/init.d/nfslock

> Edit /etc/modules.conf

This file has changed with the 2.6 kernel. It's now located at
/etc/modprobe.conf

> Create or Edit /etc/sysconfig/nfs

You actually have to create the file yourself. It should contain
something like this:
SECURE_NFS="no"
RPCNFSDCOUNT=8

Good luck,

Jesse


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