On Sun, 2019-12-08 at 13:25 -0500, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 2019-12-08 12:42, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > On Sun, 2019-12-08 at 11:35 -0500, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> > > I guess you mean exports?
> > > 
> > > [root@NFS-Server bobg]# cat /etc/exports
> > > # /nfs4exports/home
> > > 192.168.2.0/24(rw,sync,insecure,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check)
> > Is that the actual file? If so, why is there a '#' at the start of the
> > first line, and why is it split into two lines (unless that's an
> > artefact of your email client)?
> 
> .
> 
> Why the #'s. to comment out the lines and limit it to just whatever was 
> uncommitted that I was trying at tat time. just a random collection of 
> things tried ...

It's not really practical to debug what's going on unless you show what
is actually in the /etc/exports file when you get the failure.

And it's *very* important to show it as it really is, without any line
breaks introduced by your mailer.

> > This is my file:
> > $ cat /etc/exports
> > /home/Media     192.168.0.0/16(ro,all_squash,insecure)
> > /home/poc/Stuff      192.168.122.0/24(rw)
> > 
> > poc
> 
> .
> 
> The "/home/Media" part is what I need for my /etc/exports file, where, 
> how, do I find that? Perhaps  /home/bobg/Public? none of that matters if 
> NFS does not run which is what I am seeing ...

You don't "find" it. It's the server directory you want to access from
the client(s). That just happens to be one I use. It could in principle
be any directory that exists on the server.

poc
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