Anyone have any thoughts on this one? It's a bit long winded, but I want to give all the details so anyone who has seen this before may pick up on what I've missed. I'm trying to get Linux (RH 5.0) to export a directory to an NT or 95 system. I've done this hundreds of times at work . . . however, I was always on the PC/NT end. Our Unix sysadmins always set up the NFS exports and I did the PC end. All I ever knew was I had to provide them with the IP number of the PC and the directory path on the Unix box and somehow they magically exported it. Then I set up a Linux system at home here and I'm trying to get the same thing working. Here's what I get as an error on NT, using ON- NET32's Interdrive: "An error occurred in the network provider Interdrive NT. 1208: The PCNFSD is not accessable on the remote server. Contact your system administrator (or try logging in as user name NOBODY.)" I tried NOBODY . . . no luck. I'm pretty sure I have the NT side of things configured correctly. It's something I've done from DOS/WIN- 311/95/NT over the years and it always works. The NFS share shows up under the correct NFS server (my Linux system) when you try to map a network drive, so it appears to be a permissions problem. I use the correct name and password for /home/pdunphy . . . even tried root and the root password. No luck. Always the same error. Being new to the Unix side, I assume I've got something wrong there. Here's what I did: Edited /etc/exports so that it contains the following line only /home/pdunphy 10.0.0.1(rw,no_root_squash) Then I stopped and started the MOUNTD and NFS services as follows: /etc/rc.d/init.d/nfs stop /etc/rc.d/init.d/nfs start Running rpcinfo -p gives the following: program vers proto port 100000 2 tcp 111 rpcbind 100000 2 udp 111 rpcbind 100005 1 udp 635 mountd 100005 2 udp 635 mountd 100005 1 tcp 635 mountd 100005 2 tcp 635 mountd 100003 2 udp 2049 nfs 100003 2 tcp 2049 nfs This tells me the mountd and nfs services are running, but I'm curious why there are four instances of mountd reported . . . all the I could find indicated two of mountd and two for nfs. Is this the problem? If so, how does one fix it? There is one other thing that I found strange. I ran glint and looked at the networking packages, specifically the nfs-server daemon. When you do a verify, it reports it as nfs-server:2.2beta29:2 and all is ok except the /etc/exports file indicates a checksum,size,time problem. When I look at the details of this, it says that it expects to see the one created today (gives the right date, etc.) but says the current one is date Thu Oct 30 12:33:07 1997 (presumably this is the default one from the /mnt/cdrom/RedHat/RPMS.) I tried uninstalling and reinstalling this, deleting the /etc/exports file and re-creating it, etc. Always the same message. Expects the new one you've created, but seems to get the default as the current. This may not be important as I've changed the contents of /etc/exports and the NT system sees the actual directories I put in the file . . . and when I change them, NT sees the changes. This leads me to believe that nfs and mountd are really processing the right file. Any thoughts on all this would be appreciated. Regards, Paul -- PLEASE read the Red Hat FAQ, Tips, Errata and the MAILING LIST ARCHIVES! http://www.redhat.com/RedHat-FAQ /RedHat-Errata /RedHat-Tips /mailing-lists To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe" as the Subject.