similar to: home on nfs

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 80000 matches similar to: "home on nfs"

2017 Oct 30
3
home on nfs
Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org> writes: > On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: >> >> Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org> writes: >> >>>> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> I have the home directory of a
2017 Oct 29
2
home on nfs
Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org> writes: >> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a >> client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather >> than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it.
2017 Oct 31
0
home on nfs
> -----Original Message----- > From: hw [mailto:hw at adminart.net] > Sent: Monday, October 30, 2017 12:02 PM > To: CentOS mailing list > Subject: Re: [CentOS] home on nfs > > Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org> writes: > > > On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: > >> > >> Jonathan Billings <billings at
2017 Oct 29
0
home on nfs
On Oct 28, 2017, at 23:15, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: > > Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org> writes: > >>> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a >>> client. When the user logs in, they end up
2017 Nov 04
0
home on nfs
hw a ?crit : > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda works > fine --- but only kinda. When the user starts emacs, some of the
2017 Oct 28
0
home on nfs
> On Oct 27, 2017, at 10:21, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: > > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda works > fine
2017 Oct 27
0
home on nfs
There are seven fields on each line in a typical Linux "/etc/passwd" file. For a line that looks like this: root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash 1. root: Account username. 2. x: Placeholder for password information. The password is obtained from the "/etc/shadow" file. 3. 0: User ID. Each user has a unique ID that identifies them on the system. The root user is always referenced
2017 Nov 04
1
home on nfs
Patrick B?gou : > > About NFS home directories and CentOS have you .nfsxxxxxxxxx tempory > files located in the home of your user ? > I have this very often. I was not able to found any documentation about > this but if they are temporary files for NFS transactions is there a way > to store them on on local client disk area like /tmp instead of a NFS > storage? > These
2016 Sep 16
2
SELinux module
Hello everyone, I have a problem with oddjob_mkhomedir on a NFS mount point. The actual context is nfs_t drwxr-xr-x. root root system_u:object_r:nfs_t:s0 users/ With this type, oddjob_mkhomedir cannot do is job of creating home user directories. In the logs, I found about creating a new module with audi2allow and semodule: [root@ audit]# sealert -l fe2d7f60-d3ff-405b-b518-38d0cf021598
2017 Oct 27
0
home on nfs
hw wrote: > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda works > fine --- but only kinda. When the user starts emacs, some of the >
2017 Oct 27
0
home on nfs
On Fri, 2017-10-27 at 16:21 +0200, hw wrote: > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on > a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory > rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda > works > fine --- but only
2017 Oct 27
0
home on nfs
On Fri, 27 Oct 2017, hw wrote: > Hi, > > I have the home directory of a user on an nfs server and mount it on a > client. When the user logs in, they end up in the root directory rather > than in their actual home directory and need to cd into it. > > The user can read and write to their home directory, so it kinda works > fine --- but only kinda. When the user starts
2017 Oct 03
2
Intel turbo mode
Stephen John Smoogen <smooge at gmail.com> writes: > On 1 October 2017 at 11:34, hw <hw at adminart.net> wrote: >> Hi, >> >> is there a way in Centos to find out if the Intel turbo mode will be >> used? >> >> Using the 'stress' utility and checking the frequency with cpupower >> tells me that a CPU is running at it?s maximum
2020 May 18
4
how does autofs deal with stuck NFS mounts and suspending to RAM?
Hi, after trying sshfs to mount a remote file system on a server with the result that sshfs will sooner or later get stuck and require a reboot of the client, I'm fed up with it and am looking for alternatives. So next I would like to use NFS over a VPN connection instead. To minimize the instances of the NFS mount getting stuck, it might be helpful to use autofs. What happens when the
2014 Oct 16
2
conversion issue on NFS shares
Hi T'm trying to convert XEN virtual machine image into raw. Source file is on NFS export and destination is also on nfs export. (both exports are mounted on migration servers RW access). I'm getting permission denied. I have RW access to both exports - I can create, delete objects on both exports from migration server. But when I copy img file onto migration server local filesystem,
2018 Jan 24
2
CentosĀ“s way of handling mdadm
Hi, what?s the proposed way of handling mdadm in Centos 7? I did not get any notification when a disk in a RAID1 failed, and now that the configuration has changed after resolving the problem, I might be supposed to somehow update /etc/mdadm.conf. Am I not supposed to be notified by default when something goes wrong with an array? How do I update /etc/mdadm.conf? I?m used to all this working
2017 Oct 03
6
how to prevent files and directories from being deleted?
Alexander Dalloz <ad+lists at uni-x.org> writes: > Am 01.10.2017 um 17:21 schrieb hw: >> Hi, >> >> how can I prevent files/directories like /var/run/mariadb from being >> deleted on reboot? Lighttpd has the same problem. >> >> This breaks services and makes servers non-restartable by anyone else >> but the administrator who needs to re-create
2017 Oct 01
2
Intel turbo mode
Hi, is there a way in Centos to find out if the Intel turbo mode will be used? Using the 'stress' utility and checking the frequency with cpupower tells me that a CPU is running at it?s maximum frequency as reported by cpupower --- and this frequency is less than the frequency it would run at if it used the turbo mode. All the other CPUs are at their minimum frequency. I have verified
2009 Apr 01
2
filesystem rpm fails when /home is NFS mounted
I don't know if it's a bug or a feature, but the filesystem-2.4.0-2.el5.centos rpm won't upgrade cleanly if /home is an NFS filesystem. I sorta-kinda remember this when going from 5.1 to 5.2, but that memory is hazy. -- Paul Heinlein <> heinlein at madboa.com <> http://www.madboa.com/
2020 May 19
1
how does autofs deal with stuck NFS mounts and suspending to RAM?
On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 05:36:03PM -0600, Warren Young wrote: > On May 18, 2020, at 5:13 AM, hw <hw at gc-24.de> wrote: > > > > Is there a better alternative for mounting remote file systems > > over unreliable > > connections? > > I don?t have a good answer for you, because if you?d asked me > without all this backstory whether NFS or SSHFS is more