Thank you very much for your suggestions!
Unfortunately, nfs is not an option. One of my two NAS (the Netgear)
supports nfs, but I found out, that if I bind writing rights to some IPs
of my subnet, it's working with that device.
Unfortunately the kernel, of the other device, does not support nfs.
There's a community-build kernel supporting this, but I do not have
enough confidence in my linux knowledge to change the kernel.
But I am confused what's the difference between mounting a share (via
mount -t ... or editing the fstab) and accessing the share with nautilus
(smb:[log in to unmask])?
I always thought, that cifs is the newer version of smb and that there
aren't many differences.
When I am looking for mounted devices (mount or df) I don't get anything
about the shares, which are accessed via nautilus - so they are not
mounted!?
--
Julian Klein
Am 15.04.2010 19:14, schrieb Steven J. Yellin:
> It doesn't look as if anybody has suggested solutions for your
> problem, so here's some information that probably won't help, but might:
> I have a Western Digital ShareSpace NAS which, like your devices,
> did not preserve uid/gid on files copied to it under nfs. But the web
> interface for controlling the NAS shows an advanced option permitting
> root SSH access. I didn't see the option in the manual, but it's
> there, and maybe it's available on one or both of your devices. After
> (temporarily) enabling SSH and logging onto the NAS as root (then
> changing the password), it became clear that it's a computer with a
> tiny memory and a puny processor running a small linux operating
> system to control disk space with the help of software raid. In its
> /etc/exports was a line
>
> /nfs/Public *(rw,all_squash,sync,insecure,anonuid=65534,anongid=65534)
>
> Changing the line to
>
> /nfs/Public *(rw,sync,no_root_squash)
>
> and doing '/etc/init.d/S80nfsd reload' resulted in preservation of
> uid/gid on files copied to it under nfs.
>
> Steven Yellin
>
> On Wed, 14 Apr 2010, julian_klein wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I've some problems mounting some folders, located on NAS-Devices.
>> One is a old freecom fsg-3, the other one is a newer Netgear Duo.
>>
>> When I'm mounting the folders into a mountpoint in my user-folder
>> using fstab, i can open, delete, copy or rename files using nautilus
>> without any proplems.
>> But when I open any file with an application - for example with
>> openoffice writer or another application - i can't save the file
>> without problems. I have to save it localy, and then I have to paste
>> it with nautilus. I can't create "working" files at all with an
>> application .
>> But the "save-copies" witch are made for example by openoffice in my
>> user-folder (.../.openoffice/...) will be empty files. In the
>> cifs-folder, the files are created, but are empty (0 Byte) files.
>> When I open existing files I get an error, that openoffice can't
>> create the save-copy. When I try to create files with openoffice, the
>> error message says "General E/A error" (this error-message is
>> translated).
>>
>> My fstab is like that:
>> //[IP-Numer-NAS]/[folder]
>> /home/userfolder]/[folder] cifs
>> rw,username=blabla,password=blabla 0 0
>>
>> On the NAS-devices, uids and gids are different from uids/gids on my
>> workstation, so using nfs is no option, I think.
>> When I mount the folders, using the gnome-menu option "Verbindung zu
>> Server..." everything works fine.
>> So I think, obviously there is something wrong with my fstab syntax.
>>
>>
>> Could somebody help me with that?
>>
>> thx in advance,
>>
>> Julian
>>
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