Mount Nfs Input Output Error Windows Nfs Server
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NFS client ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ashisaApril 19, 200720 Share 0 0 Mounting NFS share on NFS client Now click on OK twice and come out of the folder properties saving the changes you've made, open a
Rpc: Failed To Contact Portmap
command prompt and run – showmount –e.This should return the exports list for this mount windows nfs share on linux input output error system and should list the folder you just shared – Next step is to check the NTFS permission on this folder. Windows
Windows Nfs Input Output Error
Server 2003 systems do not include anonymous users in the Everyone group and you need to manually add the Anonymous Logons group to the access list (I have done that before going any further). This https://access.redhat.com/solutions/48225 KB article talks more about it. We are now ready to go to the NFS client and mount this share.Run the showmount command from your client – Now, you can mount it on a Linux host using the following command –mount –t nfs NFSSRV:/nfsshare /mnt/nfs Let’s go ahead and run some of our favorite commands – I have mounted the share on /mnt/nfs on this box and what I did was go https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/sfu/2007/04/19/mounting-nfs-share-on-nfs-client/ to /mnt directory and see what are the ownerships and permissions shown for this mount (remember after you mount a NFS share on a directory the permissions shown are that of the NFS share mounted and not of the directory which is the mount point). Then I switched to that mount point and then created myfile1 using touch command. Next thing I did was to list everything there. << Sharing folders over NFS Back to post Who's 4294967294? >>
Tags Pages Server for NFS SFU Windows Server 2003 R2 Comments (20) Cancel reply Name * Email * Website Dan Summers says: August 24, 2007 at 9:29 am Excellent. Vital information simply presented. Thank you. Reply S. Karthikeyan says: November 23, 2007 at 7:02 am I have been trying to configure microsoft SFU NFS server on my system. I get an input output/error even after i follow your steps exactly. 1) started the nfs server 2) shared a folder as told here 3) mounted it from linux 4) doing an ls -l tp that folder gives me ls: nfsshare: Input/output error Please respond here. Reply ashisa says: November 26, 2007 at 1:19 pm Sorry, was away for thanksgiving holidays. Is this a really large folder? You can try changing the SecureHandleLevel registry setting to 0after time Pages: 1 #1 2014-09-16 13:51:35 Carl Karl Member Registered: 2013-06-12 Posts: 225 [solved] NFS: "ls: reading directory .: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=187131 Input/output error" after time Hello,I got the following configuration:NFS-server: https://gerrydevstory.com/2013/11/12/mount-nfs-inputoutput-error-when-mounting-from-centos-5-9-to-6-4/ Always on, connected via LAN.NFS-clients: 2 computers, connected via LAN and WLAN. On standby: auto umount NFS-share via system-sleep-hook with systemd.This works flawlessly some hours or even days. But after some time, the following happens:1. mount nfs-share: no error output error message2a. trying to access that folder via filemanager, e.g. thunar: folder seems to be empty (it isn't on server!), but the correct freesize of the NFS-share on server is displayed in the statusbar.2b. trying to access that folder via commandline: $ ls ls: reading directory .: Input/output errorThe very input output error same worked just a few hours before, I haven't changed anything meanwhile. Apart from standby (--> auto umount NFS-share) and resume (manual mount NFS-share) on the clients which worked before, too.Any idea what's going wrong?additional info:server: /etc/exports _______________________ /srv/nfs/myshare 192.168.2.0/24(rw,all_squash,anonuid=33,anongid=33,no_subtree_check)(yes, the mapping is needed and right.)clients:/etc/fstab _______________________ servername:/srv/nfs/myshare /home/carl/nfs nfs4 noauto,soft,user,_netdev,timeo=14,rsize=8192,wsize=8192 0 0/usr/lib/systemd/system-sleep/umount-nfs _______________________ #!/bin/sh case $1 in pre) umount -f /home/carl/nfs ;; esac Last edited by Carl Karl (2014-09-21 17:07:47) Offline #2 2014-09-16 14:15:27 nomorewindows Member Registered: 2010-04-03 Posts: 3,015 Re: [solved] NFS: "ls: reading directory .: Input/output error" after time Somehow your nfs mounts have gone stale. You'd need to remount them or restart nfs related services. Dmesg or syslog output may help. I may have to CONSOLE you about your usage of ridiculously easy graphical interfaces...Look ma, no mouse. Offline #3 2014-09-16 14:29:10 Carl Karl Member Registered: 2013-06-12 Posts: 225 Re: [s
trying to mount a NFS shared folder on CentOS 6.4 from CentOS 5.9 and found a really tricky problem. I've added the /etc/fstab entry, but once I ran mount /my/folder it stuck for 2-3 minutes and came back saying mount.nfs: Input/output error Things I've Tried This is all the things I've tried with no success: Ensured network connection was ok. I checked the firewall / iptables and made sure the client machine can connect to NFS server Checked my /etc/hosts file, ensured no dodgy entries Double checked /etc/exports and ran exportfs -r on the NFS server Ran showmount -e [host_ip] to check the NFS server really does advertise the shared folders Ran rpcinfo -p [host_ip] to check the version and supporting services are available Rebooting the server many times Solution Thanks to this post from linuxquestion.org forum, the solution was to add nolock option to the /etc/fstab file. 10.0.10.10:/my/folder /mnt/nfs/my/folder nfs nolock 0 0 CentOS manual is pretty vague as well on what this option really does, but oh well it seems to do the job for time being nolock — Disables file locking. This setting is occasionally required when connecting to older NFS servers. centosnfs Post navigation Previous PostCentOS / RHEL NFS Share Network Folder MountingNext PostBinding a List Request Parameter on Spring MVC Leave a Reply Cancel reply Gerry's software development journey of trial, errors and re-trials Sponsored Content Recent Posts Google Chrome Taking 16GB of my Macbook Air Managing Spring Security User Session Why You Should Use Java 8: NullPointerException Free Object Access Using Optional Using ZeroMQ Java Binding ZeroMQ Windows Java Binding: Building libzmq.dll, jzmq.dll and zmq.jar Using Visual Studio 2012 Archives Archives Select Month November 2015 August 2015 July 2015 April 2015 March 2015 February 2015 January 2015 December 2014 November 2014 October 2014 August 2014 June 2014 May 2014 April 2014 March 2014 February 2014 January 2014 December 2013 November 2013 September 2013 August 2013 July 2013 June 2013 May 2013 March 2013 September 2012 August 2012 July 2012 June 2012 May 2012 Sponsored Content Proudly powered by WordPress