Hi,
I'm trying to set up my "work" laptop, which has CentOS 6.6, for easy
NFS access to a "NAS" disk at home. I can't set for a normal "permanent"
mount, since most of the time, the filesystem will not be available. I
know several different ways to mount temporarily from the command line,
but
>+1. also, it'd probably be good to state what you're trying to accomplish
>rather
>than if you can throw a technology at vague something or another. I think
>you'd
>find gpg's password input cumbersome for symmetric keys, the output too long
>in ascii
>armor and possibly annoying to deal wi
On 2015-07-11, Jerry Geis
wrote:
>>+1. also, it'd probably be good to state what you're trying to
>>accomplish rather than if you can throw a technology at vague
>>something or another. I think you'd find gpg's password input
>>cumbersome for symmetric keys, the output too long in ascii armor
Why not just use autofs and have it mounted on demand?
jh
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>
> You might want to setup an alias mv "mv -Z"
> This changes the way mv works to set the context after mv rather then
> maintaining the source context.
Thanks! That's probably a good suggestion. However I did try doing a
restorecon -R -v on the entire puppet directory. No luck in resolving that
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