Dan Fulbright wrote:
When I try to mount an NFS filesystem, I get this error:
mount: unknown filesystem type 'nfs'
Something must not be loaded. What do you get by running "rpcinfo -p"?
For comparison, here's what I get:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ rpcinfo -p
program vers proto port
100000 2 tcp 111 portmapper
100000 2 udp 111 portmapper
100021 1 udp 1024 nlockmgr
100021 3 udp 1024 nlockmgr
391002 2 tcp 605 sgi_fam
100024 1 udp 676 status
100024 1 tcp 679 status
100003 2 udp 2049 nfs
100003 2 tcp 2049 nfs
100005 1 udp 2048 mountd
100005 2 udp 2048 mountd
100005 1 tcp 2048 mountd
100005 2 tcp 2048 mountd
On host1 (the server), I get:
program vers proto port
100000 2 tcp 111 portmapper
100000 2 udp 111 portmapper
100024 1 udp 876 status
100024 1 tcp 879 status
100003 2 udp 2049 nfs
100021 1 udp 47040 nlockmgr
100021 3 udp 47040 nlockmgr
100005 1 udp 868 mountd
100005 1 tcp 871 mountd
100005 2 udp 868 mountd
100005 2 tcp 871 mountd
On host2 (the client), I get:
program vers proto port
100000 2 tcp 111 portmapper
100000 2 udp 111 portmapper
100024 1 udp 704 status
100024 1 tcp 707 status
Lack of mountd here is suspicious, because its mount that's not
recognizing nfs (apparently, not that I'm any nfs expert.) You
can try to manually start its init script in /etc/init.d/. (I've
got one file there called mountnfs.sh, which may be the one you need.)
So, it looks like you might be right. The two machines are nearly
identical. I didn't do the actual install of Debian, and I just noticed
that they are running different kernel versions:
host1:~# uname -a
Linux host1.domain.com 2.4.23 #5 SMP Tue Feb 10 08:06:33 CST 2004 i686
GNU/Linux
host2:~# uname -a
Linux host2.domain.com 2.4.26-bf2.4 #1 SMP Wed May 26 08:34:11 PDT 2004
i686 GNU/Linux
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