On Wed, 2009-07-15 at 11:02 -0400, JohnS wrote: > On Tue, 2009-07-14 at 06:39 -0700, Craig White wrote: > > On Tue, 2009-07-14 at 00:42 -0400, JohnS wrote: > > > On Mon, 2009-07-13 at 16:32 -0400, Rob Kampen wrote: > > > <snip> > > > > > > > > So now it seems what I have is an Openoffice problem. It writes odt > > > > files just fine via nfs but not doc files. > > > > Must be a micro$oft conspiracy. > > > > I'll take this off list as it does not appear to be a CentOS issue. > > > --- > > > /usr/lib/openoffice/program/soffice > > > > > > # file locking now enabled by default > > > SAL_ENABLE_FILE_LOCKING=1 > > > export SAL_ENABLE_FILE_LOCKING > > > > > > Comment those two lines out and try that. An alternative is to use > > > Samba instead of NFS. I had that problem on NFS also a while ago. > > ---- > > perhaps as a test but that is a bad idea for every day usage. > > > > Craig > > --- > Correct, but I only use that on a NFS server at home and not on > production client machines. Production client I have using samba. ---- I can assure you from my own home usage that if I have file open on Linux (Fedora) desktop system, files are mounted from CentOS server via NFS mount and Windows uses samba from same CentOS server and if either is using an ODF or XLS or DOC file, the other will be notified that the file is locked and offered to open a copy or read-only. Locking semantics seems to work perfectly among systems. Craig -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.