On Fri, Jan 27, 2012 at 3:44 AM, Tru Huynh tru@centos.org wrote:
[root@xxxxxxx ~]# ibrix_version -l Fusion Manager version: 6.0.326 =============================== Segment Servers =============== HOST_NAME FILE_SYSTEM IAD/IAS IAD/FS OS KERNEL_VERSION ARCH --------- ------------------ ------- ------- --------- -------------- ---- xxxxxxxx1 6.0.326(X9000_6_0) 6.0.326 6.0.326 GNU/Linux 2.6.18-194.el5 x86_64 xxxxxxxx2 6.0.326(X9000_6_0) 6.0.326 6.0.326 GNU/Linux 2.6.18-194.el5 x86_64
- l'export et les options que tu as utilisé?
[root@hummer-s2 ~]# ibrix_exportfs -l HOSTNAME FSNAME PATH OPTIONS --------- ------ --------------------------------- ------- xxxxxxxx1 ibfs1 centos6:/ibfs1/tru rw,no_root_squash xxxxxxxx1 ibfs1 centos5:/ibfs1/tru rw,no_root_squash xxxxxxxx2 ibfs1 centos6:/ibfs1/tru rw,no_root_squash xxxxxxxx2 ibfs1 centos5:/ibfs1/tru rw,no_root_squash
In the CentOS-5 and CentOS-6 machines, mount reports: ibrix:/ibfs1/tru on /home/ibrix type nfs (rw,addr=xxxx)
I would check if your problematic user is created both locally and in your NIS/LDAP/... setup with different uid, restart the gdm daemon (caching? issue), stop nscd (+ flush the local cached data, before restarting it).
Tru -
thank you for the information, here is mine for the same
[root@lri-brix01 ~]# ibrix_version -l Fusion Manager version: 6.0.326 =============================== Segment Servers =============== HOST_NAME FILE_SYSTEM IAD/IAS IAD/FS OS KERNEL_VERSION ARCH ---------- ------------------ ------- ------- --------- -------------- ---- lri-brix01 6.0.326(X9000_6_0) 6.0.326 6.0.326 GNU/Linux 2.6.18-194.el5 x86_64 lri-brix02 6.0.326(X9000_6_0) 6.0.326 6.0.326 GNU/Linux 2.6.18-194.el5 x86_64
and
[root@lri-brix01 ~]# ibrix_exportfs -l HOSTNAME FSNAME PATH OPTIONS ---------- ------ ------------------------------------- ------- lri-brix01 ibrix *:/ibrix/testing rw,no_root_squash ...... <many many exportfs shares>
On workstation, mount shows:
lri-brix:/ibrix/testing on /bme/home type nfs (rw,addr=10.66.200.11)
I even mounted the test share manually, disabling autofs and ypbind, and created a 'local' user with an NFS mounted $HOME directory and it still failed. I dont see what i have done wrong. SSH logins work, and the directory is traversable by the local user but still can not log in via Gnome or KDE.
Michael