Developer's blog

Setting up NFSv4+Kerberos+Autofs5-ldap on Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha 2 (Lucid), part 7

22.02.2010 1 comment

After getting NFSv4 working, it’d be of course nice to automatically mount the nfs exported home directories. In this part I’m going through the steps to get school specific home directories mounted from a central server. Using autofs is an alternative to defining the mounted directories in /etc/fstab. It mounts the directories automatically when they are needed instead of doing it at boot time.After getting NFSv4 working, it’d be of course nice to automatically mount the nfs exported home directories. In this part I’m going through the steps to get school specific home directories mounted from a central server. Using autofs is an alternative to defining the mounted directories in /etc/fstab. It mounts the directories automatically when they are needed instead of doing it at boot time.After getting NFSv4 working, it’d be of course nice to automatically mount the nfs exported home directories. In this part I’m going through the steps to get school specific home directories mounted from a central server. Using autofs is an alternative to defining the mounted directories in /etc/fstab. It mounts the directories automatically when they are needed instead of doing it at boot time.

Setting up NFSv4+Kerberos on Ubuntu 10.04 Alpha 2 (Lucid), part 6

21.02.2010 7 comments

Next it’s time to finally get files moving between the servers. For this we use NFSv4 that supports kerberos out-of-the-box also in Ubuntu. This part is based on the newest Lucid packages in the repositories, which should be pretty close to alpha 3 now.Next it’s time to finally get files moving between the servers. For this we use NFSv4 that supports kerberos out-of-the-box also in Ubuntu. This part is based on the newest Lucid packages in the repositories, which should be pretty close to alpha 3 now.Next it’s time to finally get files moving between the servers. For this we use NFSv4 that supports kerberos out-of-the-box also in Ubuntu. This part is based on the newest Lucid packages in the repositories, which should be pretty close to alpha 3 now.