On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 3:12 PM, Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA
<bobgoodwin(a)wildblue.net> wrote:
I have a problem connecting this Fedora-20 computer with an NFS server. I
have just set up the server on Scientific Linux 7.
The mount command:
[root@box10 bobg]# mount 192.168.1.48:/mnt/nasdata /mnt/box48/
Does nothing until it eventually times out. I can ssh into the server and
see all the files. I tried to configure it to be nearly the same as another
NFS server that has been working well.
[bobg@box48 ~]$ cat /etc/exports
/nfs4exports
192.168.1.0/24(ro,sync,insecure,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check,fsid=0)
/nfs4exports/data
192.168.1.0/24(rw,sync,insecure,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check)
/nfs4exports/home
192.168.1.0/24(rw,sync,insecure,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check)
[bobg@box48 ~]$ cat /etc/fstab
UUID=edf0c0db-d48a-46da-81b3-ef6c7b502175 / xfs defaults 1 1
UUID=ae08aa95-4ffc-4ac4-a434-60909636c0bf /boot xfs defaults 1 2
UUID=f3aeadd2-70bc-4f45-b6d6-2f96f602871e /home xfs defaults 1 2
UUID=3f57869c-eca7-4196-a28f-698acf3c752c swap swap defaults 0 0
/home/data nfs4exports/data none rw,bind 0 0
/home/home nfs4exports/home none rw,bind 0 0
":/mnt/nasdata"?
On the server, what's the output of:
systemctl status nfs*
systemctl status rpc*
systemctl status var*.mount
exportfs
rpcinfo -p
iptables -nL (or iptables -S)