Mike Cloaked wrote: > > > a) there are indeed a number of references around, but some refer to using > portmap (like in your first ref), but I understand that this is deprecated > in favour of rpcbind - and I believe that this is running by default in > recent versions of Fedora. > b) it is not clear whether there are any selinux gotchas so I was hoping > that someone would respond saying that they had set up nfs server and > client and that either it worked great, or that there were issues - and > then say what the workarounds are, or refer to a link explaining how to > deal with it. > c) I was hoping to see a single article that included automounting nfs > shares rather than permanently mounting them via fstab since for my use > case I did not need to tie up resources except for short times when the > nfs share was needed. > d) I was also hoping to see cases where nfs3 had been used and the > sysadmin moved over to nfs4 - and then find what the problems, if any, > where using version 4 rather than 3. Hopefully easier since a single port > must be opened up in the firewall rather than multiple ports for nfs v3 > > I was also hoping to gauge whether there were many people who read this > list who are nfs4 rather than 3 users - or whether the predominant use is > still nfs3 > Excuse the odd typo in the previous post - actually the linuxhomenetworking link that google finds at http://www.linuxhomenetworking.com/wiki/index.php/Quick_HOWTO_:_Ch29_:_Remote_Disk_Access_with_NFS is quite a good guide but does not mention selinux... perhaps selinux works so transparently now that it does not need mentioning! -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/NFSv4-setup--tp25915080p25921191.html Sent from the Fedora List mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines