On Mon, 4 Jan 2010, Robert G. (Doc) Savage wrote: > On Sun, 2010-01-03 at 22:05 -0500, Robert P. J. Day wrote: > > On Sun, 3 Jan 2010, Robert G. (Doc) Savage wrote: > > ... snip ... > > > The problem appears to be on the F12 client side: > > > > > > # service nfs restart > > > Shutting down NFS mountd: [FAILED] > > > Shutting down NFS daemon: [ OK ] > > > Shutting down NFS quotas: [ OK ] > > > Shutting down NFS services: [FAILED] > > > Starting NFS services: [ OK ] > > > Starting NFS quotas: [ OK ] > > > Starting NFS daemon: [ OK ] > > > Starting NFS mountd: Usage: rpc.mountd [-F|--foreground] [-h|--help] [-v|--version] [ > > > -d kind|--debug kind] > > > [-o num|--descriptors num] [-f exports-file|--exports-file=file] > > > [-p|--port port] [-V version|--nfs-version version] > > > [-N version|--no-nfs-version version] [-n|--no-tcp] > > > [-H ha-callout-prog] [-s|--state-directory-path path] > > > [-g|--manage-gids] [-t num|--num-threads=num] > > > [FAILED] > > > > > > > > > About four years ago I was able to set up a similar arrangement > > > using nfs3 on RHEL4 and F6, but this is my first attempt with nfs4. > > > I seem to be having the same problem Robert P.J. Day is having with > > > rpc.mountd. > > > > a private emailer tells me that what's causing the problem above is > > deselecting the NFSv1 line from /etc/sysconfig/nfs. apparently, that > > causes the problem so you should try this: > > > > #MOUNTD_NFS_V1="no" > > MOUNTD_NFS_V2="no" > > MOUNTD_NFS_V3="no" > > > > weirdly, that fixes that last problem. why should that be? > > Robert, > > Weird is right. It does fix the nfs restart problem, but not the > manual nfs mount problem. There's something else still lurking. > Thanks. i'll start with submitting the above rpc.mountd error(?) to bugzilla. it seems pretty clear that *needing* NFSv1 support simply to *start* rpc.mountd makes no sense. but there's still another issue related to this. as i read it, NFSv4 now incorporates the mount operation in the protocol, and i read that as saying that you don't even *need* a running rpc.mountd anymore if you restrict yourself to NFSv4. however, the earlier emailer wrote the following: "My understanding is that mountd, statd etc are still needed but they do not need to be exposed to the outside world. That is, you can limit all of them in /etc/hosts.allow to 127.0.0.1 and only open port 2049 on the firewall." so does anyone know for sure? in any event, i'll bugzilla that earlier error. rday -- ======================================================================== Robert P. J. Day Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA Linux Consulting, Training and Kernel Pedantry. Web page: http://crashcourse.ca Twitter: http://twitter.com/rpjday ======================================================================== -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines