Online Documentation Server
 ПОИСК
ods.com.ua Web
 КАТЕГОРИИ
Home
Programming
Net technology
Unixes
Security
RFC, HOWTO
Web technology
Data bases
Other docs

 


 ПОДПИСКА

 О КОПИРАЙТАХ
Вся предоставленная на этом сервере информация собрана нами из разных источников. Если Вам кажется, что публикация каких-то документов нарушает чьи-либо авторские права, сообщите нам об этом.




Next Up Previous Contents
Next: Mounting an NFS Volume Up: The Network File System Previous: The Network File System

Preparing NFS

Before you can use NFS, be it as server or client, you must make sure your kernel has NFS support compiled in. Newer kernels have a simple interface on the proc filesystem for this, the /proc/filesystems file, which you can display using cat:
     $ cat /proc/filesystems
     minix
     ext2
     msdos
     nodev   proc
     nodev   nfs
If nfs is missing from this list, then you have to compile your own kernel with NFS enabled. Configuring the kernel network options is explained in section ``Kernel Configuration'' in chapter-gif.

For older kernels prior to -1.1, the easiest way to find out whether your kernel has NFS support enabled is to actually try to mount an NFS file system. For this, you could create a directory below /tmp, and try to mount a local directory on it:

     # mkdir /tmp/test
     # mount localhost:/etc /tmp/test
If this mount attempt fails with an error message saying ``fs type nfs no supported by kernel'', you must make a new kernel with NFS enabled. Any other error messages are completely harmless, as you haven't configured the NFS daemons on your host yet.



Andrew Anderson
Thu Mar 7 23:22:06 EST 1996


With any suggestions or questions please feel free to contact us