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Date: | Sat, 12 Mar 2011 20:22:41 +0100 |
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On 03/12/2011 05:51 PM, Robert P. J. Day wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Mar 2011, Alec T. Habig wrote:
>
>> I was poking at this yesterday myself with no success, so would love
>> to know what the answer is.
>>
>> This is especially important since by default, iptables is installed
>> and active, and AFAIK the only way for nfs to coexist with iptables
>> is use nfs4. So out of the box, nfs doesn't work unless one
>> disables a security tool, aside from the issue that nfs4 is designed
>> to have a much higher level of security than the older versions,
>> such that we really should all be using it exclusively anyway.
>
> actually, i take it back, it's possible this is fixed. i edited
> /etc/sysconfig/nfs and uncommented all references to dropping support
> for NFS v2 and v3, and NFS seems to start. didn't used to, so maybe
> this issue has been resolved.
>
> once NFS is running, is there a convenient command to *show* me what
> versions of NFS are currently supported?
>
> rday
>
One option will be to use nfsstat command.
--
CL Martinez
carlopmart {at} gmail {d0t} com
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