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Closed 9 years ago.
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Is there a way to find out if a mount drive, for ex: /var, is mount to an NFS?
You can just use mount command to check, e.g
mount |grep nfs
Or if you want to list all nfs you've mounted:
mount -l -t nfs4
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Closed 2 years ago.
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I have a secondary hard drive and wanted to to mount the drive to the /home/josh/plexmedia2 folder.
In order to to do that I run the below command
sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /home/josh/plexmedia2
However, when I reboot the server, the drive becomes unmounted. How can I make the drive mount itself on boot?
Put your command in a script and save the script in /etc/init.d directory. Giving the necessary permission.
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Closed 4 years ago.
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I'm using samba in Linux Fedora 26 to mount a share folder, but it is showing some error which is mentioned below:
The Command I used is:
mount_smbfs -I 192.168.1.10 "//Mohamed#gworks-developer-pc/smbtest1" /mnt/local_share
And I get the following error:
bash: mount_smbfs: command not found
I am attaching error Image Samba mount point for reference.
How to solve the issue, Any idea.....?
Use cifs instead. Take a look at this link.
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Closed 6 years ago.
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I need to mount other server via sshfs with read-only mode. My OS is Linux (Ubuntu). Is it possible to do that?
My command used with that connection is:
sudo sshfs user#123.123.123.123:/home/user /media/mountpoint/ -o allow_other
After running that I have write-access. I need to have read-only. Please help.
just add one more option: sshfs user#123.123.123.123:/home/user /media/mountpoint/ -o allow_other -o ro .
this should help: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=975107
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Closed 8 years ago.
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Lets say I want to access a windows file C:\Users\Documents\Myfolder\whatever.txt on Ubuntu. Is there any command existing that I can open whatever.txt on Ubuntu ? Also What will be the format of path ?
Your C partition should be mounted somewhere in /media. The rest of the path is pretty straightforward.
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Closed 8 years ago.
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I have some big data on a computer A.
Is it possible to run a program on another computer B using this data (using ssh or something?).
Of course it is possible. There are endless possibilities for working with data on a remote computer. Assuming that NFS and Samba are not available a few ways you can use ssh:
fish scp sshfs or sftp.
e.g.
scp user#host:/wrong/places/* /proc/self/fd/1 | grep love