| To: | Bob Wirka <bobwirka@xxxxxxxxxxxx> |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: NFS and Network Driver Question |
| From: | Stephen Hemminger <shemminger@xxxxxxxx> |
| Date: | Wed, 20 Oct 2004 08:58:13 -0700 |
| Cc: | no To-header on input <unlisted-recipients:;>, netdev@xxxxxxxxxxx, linux-net@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
| In-reply-to: | <4175AEFE.7090002@xxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| References: | <41704198.8000206@xxxxxxxxxxxx> <4175AEFE.7090002@xxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Sender: | netdev-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxx |
| User-agent: | Mozilla Thunderbird 0.8 (X11/20040923) |
Bob Wirka wrote: Are you getting bit by the nfs uid mapping on the server. Is it mapping your local "root" to "nobody"Ok, now I feel like I'm taking crazy pills...The embedded system boots up and mounts the root file system on my host laptop. The 'rc.sysinit' startup script executes the command 'mount -a' which should mount /proc, /dev/pts, and /dev/shm, as listed in /etc/fstab. When executed, that command returns "mount: only root can do that".When I get to the bash prompt, 'whoami' reports that I am, indeed, root. A 'mount -a' from the command prompt gives the same result; it doesn't think I'm root for the mount command.I can chown a file owned by root to some other user, and I can create a file or directory in a directory owned by root; so it doesn't always think I'm not root. on the server? |
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