Boot Error Autonfs
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Rpc.statd Failed To Create Rpc Listeners, Exiting
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Job For Rpc-statd.service Failed Because The Control Process Exited With Error Code
answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up failed to create rpc listeners exiting redhat and rise to the top Start autofs on boot up vote 4 down vote favorite 1 I have autofs all setup, and it correctly mounts my shared directories. However, right now, I have to manually run sudo upstart autofs start after every boot, before the automounting actually works. I think in installed autofs manually through synaptic, though it has been a while. The computer in question is used as failed to start nfs status monitor for nfsv2/3 locking a lightweight server, and rarely gets restarted, so having to manually start a service isn't too big a deal, but my backups do not work until autofs is running, so I do worry. 10.04 xubuntu automount share|improve this question asked Oct 24 '11 at 14:07 Fake Name 12319 I can't help directly, but I can confirm that autofs from the repositories is definitely auto-started on login/startup and will mount anything it sees in /etc/auto.master automatically. –Scaine Oct 24 '11 at 14:36 @Scaine - Well, damn if I know what's going on, then. Maybe it was packaged into the xubuntu installation, and just not enabled until I set it up. –Fake Name Oct 24 '11 at 14:40 I'd do a re-install of autofs through synaptic, but getting it working at all was an enormous pain, and I don't know if a re-install would clobber my config files. Frankly, considering how much of a complete PITA it was to get working, I really don't want to to touch autofs itself, for fear of breaking it. –Fake Name Oct 24 '11 at 14:42 Most of the configuration for autofs is just /etc/auto*.*. You'll have a master file, two or
Files EXAMPLE: Auto-mounting an NFS share Edit /etc/auto.master Create /etc/auto.nfs Unmount static mounts and edit /etc/fstab Reload /etc/init.d/autofs Make sure it works Advanced Information Note on /net and /smb Wildcard characters
Unit Rpc-statd.service Entered Failed State
Mounting Other Types of Files Systems CIFS FUSE based file systems Debugging centos 7 failed to start nfs status monitor for nfsv2/3 locking Auto Mount Problems See Also External Links 1. Introduction autofs is a program for automatically mounting directories on an
Failed To Create Rpc Listeners Exiting Centos 7
as-needed basis. Auto-mounts are mounted only as they are accessed, and are unmounted after a period of inactivity. Because of this, automounting NFS/Samba shares conserves bandwidth and offers better overall http://askubuntu.com/questions/71470/start-autofs-on-boot performance compared to static mounts via fstab. 1.1. Quick note on terms To avoid confusion, the following terminologies will be used: automount is the program used to configure a mount point for autofs. When autofs is started, an automount daemon is spawned for each map. Auto-mount or auto-mounting refers to the process of automatically mounting filesystems. autofs is the program https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Autofs that controls the operation of the automount daemons. 2. Installation Install the autofs package either by clicking here or entering the following in a terminal window: $ sudo apt-get install autofs 3. Configuration autofs can be configured by editing configuration files. There are other ways to configure autofs on a network (see AutofsLDAP), but config files provide the simplest setup. 3.1. The Master Map File The master configuration file for autofs is /etc/auto.master by default. Unless you have a good reason for changing this, leave it as the default. Here is the sample file provided by Ubuntu: # # $Id: auto.master,v 1.4 2005/01/04 14:36:54 raven Exp $ # # Sample auto.master file # This is an automounter map and it has the following format # key [ -mount-options-separated-by-comma ] location # For details of the format look at autofs(5). #/misc /etc/auto.misc --timeout=60 #/smb /etc/auto.smb #/misc /etc/auto.misc #/net /etc/auto.netBy default, all lines are commented out by using the # character. Each of the lines in auto.master describes a mount and the location of its map. These lines have the following format:
website My View | View Issues | RoadmapView Issue Details[Jump to Notes] [Issue History] [Print] IDProjectCategoryView StatusDate SubmittedLast Update0005971CentOS-6autofspublic2012-09-22 00:142015-09-14 17:51ReporterDavidWarmePrioritynormalSeveritymajorReproducibilityalwaysStatusnewResolutionopenPlatformx86_64OSCentOSOS Version6.3Product Version6.3Target VersionFixed in VersionSummary0005971: autofs fails during first boot after installDescription We install CentOS https://bugs.centos.org/view.php?id=5971 6.3 using a kickstart file (attached). During first reboot after successful install, the autofs does not work correctly, e.g., failing to mount home directories (or any other) in our LDAP resident maps. We get the following message in the system log: Sep 19 16:51:19 automount[6554]: bind_ldap_simple: lookup(ldap): Unable to bind to the LDAP server: (default), error Can't contact LDAP server Rebooting "seems" to make the problem go away -- failed to although I have personally witnessed the following sequence of events in one log file: