I have the following situation... running FC3 (updated) on an x86_64 platform.
When I reboot, I don't see any messages about NFS service failing or being started (and looking in boot.log confirms this).
But if I then log in and run "service nfs start" manually, it goes without a hitch.
I looked at the permissions, etc. of the /etc/rc.d/init.d file and it looks fine.
Where else should I be looking?
Thanks,
-Philip
On Fri, 2005-10-28 at 12:49 -0600, Philip Prindeville wrote:
I have the following situation... running FC3 (updated) on an x86_64 platform.
When I reboot, I don't see any messages about NFS service failing or being started (and looking in boot.log confirms this).
But if I then log in and run "service nfs start" manually, it goes without a hitch.
I looked at the permissions, etc. of the /etc/rc.d/init.d file and it looks fine.
Where else should I be looking?
Thanks,
-Philip
/sbin/chkconfig --add nfs
perhaps?
On Fri, Oct 28, 2005 at 02:54:26PM -0400, yonas abraham wrote:
On Fri, 2005-10-28 at 12:49 -0600, Philip Prindeville wrote:
I have the following situation... running FC3 (updated) on an x86_64 platform.
When I reboot, I don't see any messages about NFS service failing or being started (and looking in boot.log confirms this).
But if I then log in and run "service nfs start" manually, it goes without a hitch.
I looked at the permissions, etc. of the /etc/rc.d/init.d file and it looks fine.
Where else should I be looking?
Thanks,
-Philip
/sbin/chkconfig --add nfs
perhaps?
Well first I would run: chkconfig --list |grep nfs to see if nfs is set up to be started. If not I would run: chkconfig --list 35 nfs on which causes nfs to be stated at run level 3 and 5. It is also necessary for nfslock to be executed for nfs to work. Again chkconfig is your friend to get that to happen.
akonstam@trinity.edu wrote:
On Fri, Oct 28, 2005 at 02:54:26PM -0400, yonas abraham wrote:
On Fri, 2005-10-28 at 12:49 -0600, Philip Prindeville wrote:
I have the following situation... running FC3 (updated) on an x86_64 platform.
When I reboot, I don't see any messages about NFS service failing or being started (and looking in boot.log confirms this).
But if I then log in and run "service nfs start" manually, it goes without a hitch.
I looked at the permissions, etc. of the /etc/rc.d/init.d file and it looks fine.
Where else should I be looking?
Thanks,
-Philip
/sbin/chkconfig --add nfs
perhaps?
Well first I would run: chkconfig --list |grep nfs to see if nfs is set up to be started. If not I would run: chkconfig --list 35 nfs on which causes nfs to be stated at run level 3 and 5. It is also necessary for nfslock to be executed for nfs to work. Again chkconfig is your friend to get that to happen.
Ok, thanks. I ran it:
[root@mail certs]# chkconfig --list |grep nfs nfslock 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:on 4:on 5:off 6:off nfs 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off [root@mail certs]# chkconfig --level 35 nfs on [root@mail certs]# chkconfig --list |grep nfs nfslock 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:on 4:on 5:off 6:off nfs 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:on 4:off 5:on 6:off [root@mail certs]#
I had previously done an "ls -l /etc/rc.d/*/*nfs" to verify that it was set up correctly, but I must have missed something.
God I hate the SysV init stuff...
-Philip