> On 12 Jan 2017, at 21:01, Karl Young <ka...@kipshouse.org> wrote: > > Daniel Braniss(da...@cs.huji.ac.il)@2017.01.12 10:25:03 +0200: >> >>> On 12 Jan 2017, at 9:49 AM, Daniel Braniss <da...@cs.huji.ac.il> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> On 12 Jan 2017, at 1:47 AM, Karl Young <ka...@kipshouse.org> wrote: >>>> >>>> I inherited a lab that has a few hundred hosts running FreeBSD 7.2. >>>> These hosts run test scripts that access files that are stored on >>>> FreeBSD 6.3 host. The 6.3 host exports a /data directory with NFS >>>> >>>> >>>> On the 7.2 hosts, I can see the exported directory: >>>> >>>> $ showmount -e 6.3-host >>>> Exports list on 6.3-host >>>> /data Everyone >>>> >>>> And access it with amd >>>> >>>> $ ls -l /net/6-3.host/data >>>> >>>> drwxr-xr-x 5 root wheel 512 Jun 4 2009 git >>>> drwxr-xr-x 4586 root wheel 83968 Nov 2 04:50 home >>>> >>>> I'm trying to retire the 6.3 host and replace it with 9.3 (I know it's >>>> old, but it's the best I can do for now). >>>> >>>> I export the /data directory on the 9.3 system, and I can see it on my >>>> 7.2 hosts. >>>> >>>> $ showmount -e 9.3-host >>>> Exports list on 9.3-host: >>>> /data Everyone >>>> >>>> But I can't automount it: >>>> >>>> $ ls -l /net/9.3-host/data >>>> ls: /net/9.3-host/data: No such file or directory >>>> >>>> If I manually mount the exported directory, it works: >>>> >>>> $ sudo mount -t nfs 9.3-host:/data /mnt/data/ >>>> $ mount | grep nfs >>>> 9.3-host:/data on /mnt/data (nfs) >>>> >>>> $ ls -l /mnt/data >>>> total 4 >>>> drwxr-xr-x 9 root wheel 512 Dec 20 17:41 iaf2 >>>> >>>> I've spent some time on Google, but haven't found a solution. I realize >>>> these are very old versions, but I'm not in a position to upgrade them >>>> right now. My last resort will be to use /etc/fstab to do the NFS >>>> mount, but I'd rather avoid that if I can. >>>> >>>> Thanks for any pointers on how to resolve this. >>>> >>>> -karl >>>> >>>> >>> >>> if you changed the export file on the server after you tried to mount in on >>> the client, >>> and will not realise this, if that’s the case, usually rebooting the client >>> helps. >>> >> s/and/amd/ ^%$# hate spell checkers >> > > Thanks Danny > > I did try rebooting the client (and server) multiple times to no avail.
what does amq say? you can, from another host do: amq -h client-host btw, I thing that nfs_server must also run on the client … I have nfs_server_enable=YES danny _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"