Once upon a time, Chuck Forsberg WA7KGX N2469R <caf(a)omen.com> said:
Some such as I are used to thinking of NFS in terms of shares.
That's how we export them. That's how we mount them.
So when the installer asks for a server name, I naturally enter
192.168.1.13:/x because that is what I export. And naturally
I enter /fc9/os which is relative to the share in question.
It should be made clear that the NFS install uses syntax one
would associate with ftp, not NFS. Perferably with a hint,
but at least a clear example in the documentation.
Calling it "server name" and "path" is a pretty clear hint. I
don't
call my server "disk:/data/mirror", I call it "disk". Also, the
installer doesn't use an arbitrary division in the path that you are
creating; it mounts /x/fc9/os (NFS exports allow you to mount
subdirectories of the export). The installer doesn't need to know or
care that you export /x and fc9/os is a subdirectory.
When you specify an NFS install on the boot command line or in a
kickstart, it is just server:/path/to/tree.
--
Chris Adams <cmadams(a)hiwaay.net>
Systems and Network Administrator - HiWAAY Internet Services
I don't speak for anybody but myself - that's enough trouble.