>>>>> "pb" == Peter Bridge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pb> I really need a step-by-step 'how to' to access this box from pb> my OSX Leopard What you need for NFS on a laptop is a good automount daemon and a 'umount -f' command that actually does what the man page claims. The automounter in Leopard works well. The one in Tiger doesn't---has quirks and often needs to be rebooted. AFAICT both 10.4 and 10.5 have an 'umount -f' that works better than Linux and *BSD. You can use the automounter by editing files in /etc, but a better way might be to use the Directory Utility. Here is an outdated guide, not for Leopard: http://www.behanna.org/osx/nfs/howto4.html The Leopard steps are: 1. Open Directory Utility 2. pick Mounts in the tab-bar 3. click the Lock in the lower-left corner and authenticate 4. press + 5. unroll Advanced Mount Parameters 6. fill out the form something like this: Remote NFS URL: nfs://10.100.100.149/export Mount location: /Network/terabithia/export Advanced Mount Parameters: nosuid nodev locallocks [x] Ignore "set user ID" privileges 7. Press Verify 8. Press Apply, or press Command-S the locallocks mount parameter should be removed. I need it with old versions of Linux and Mac OS 10.5. I don't need it with 10.4+oldLinux, and hopefully 10.5+Solaris won't need it either. There is a 'net' mount parameter which changes Finder's behavior. Also it might be better to mount on some tree outside /Network and /Volumes since these seem to have some strange special meanings. ymmv. At my site I also put 'umask 000' in /etc/launchd.conf to, err....match user expectations of how the office used to work with SMB. For something fancier, you may have to get the Macs and Suns to share userids with LDAP. Someone recently posted a PDF here about an ozzie site serious about Macs that'd done so: http://www.afp548.com/filemgmt_data/files/OSX%20HSM.pdf Another thing worth knowing: macs throw up these boxes that say something like Server gone. [Disconnect] with a big red Disocnnect button. If your NFS server reboots, they'll throw one of these boxes at you. It looks like you only have one choice. You actually have three: 1. ignore the box 2. press the tiny red [x] in the upper-left corner of the box 3. press disconnect If you do (3), Mac OS will do 'umount -f' for you. At the time the box appears, the umount has not been done yet. If you do (1) or (2), any application using the NFS server (including potentially Finder and all its windows, not just the NFS windows) will pinwheel until the NFS server comes back. When it does come back, all the apps will continue without data loss, and if you did (1) the box will also disappear on its own. The error handling is quite good and in line with Unixy expectations and NFS statelessness.
pgpHWSn6AhMy6.pgp
Description: PGP signature
_______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss