On Wed, July 23, 2008 14:03, Jens Larsson wrote: >> Well, I definitely understand a couple of things better than when we >> started. Thank you very much! >> >> It is not, however, working. Is that likely to be the "domain=" >> setting, >> given what I said above? > > The "domain" in NFSv4-speak has nothing to do with DNS. It _can_ be you > DNS-domainname but it can be anything as long as client and server agrees. > If they disagree you can still mount, but all files will be owned by > Nobody-User and Nobody-Group if I remember correctly. Thanks. Then that's not the problem. (and the Centos RPMs have it set a way that will work, which is good.) >> But the errors I'm getting tend to be like: >> >> [ddb at host00 ~]$ sudo mount host01:/ddb /mnt/ddb -t nfs4 -o >> rw,hard,intr,proto=tcp,port=22049 >> mount: mount to NFS server 'host01' failed: System Error: Connection >> refused. > > Shield up, Scotty! > > Looks like a firewall issue to me. Do you allow incoming traffic to port > 22049/TCP? As I said in the message you're responding to, all connections from internal IPs are allowed. > > Can you mount over NFSv3? Yes. And I said that in the message you're responding to also. -- David Dyer-Bennet, dd-b at dd-b.net; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info