Hi! I have the following setup:
box1: eth0: 194.47.xxx.xx2 eth1: 192.168.0.1 box2: eth0: 194.47.xxx.xx3 eth1: 192.168.0.2 box1 and box is connected via the eth1 interfaces. box1 acts as nfs-server and box2 should be the client. The private lan works. NFS sofware installed is the knfs-package .dev in project/experimental. box1's kernel loads the nfsd as a module (2.2.3). box2 has NFS filesystem support compiled into the kernel (2.2.2ac7). My mission is to mount a partition via the private-ip-'lan'. This is what happens; untrusted:~# mount -t nfs 192.168.0.1:/home /mnt/test mount: 192.168.0.1:/home/ failed, reason given by server: Permission denied If i mount the partition via the non-private ips it works fine. hosts.allow/deny is empty, ipchains is set to ACCEPT everything on both machines. /etc/exports (on box1) looks like: /home 192.168.0.2(rw) /home 194.47.XXX.XX3(rw) The problem occurs both if i use the kernel based nfs with it's tools or the ordinary nfs-package. It appears to me as if mountd gets confused about having one non-private ip and one private ip on the server-machine (debugging mountd suggests that). Does anyone know how to solve this problem? //Martin --------- Martin Anderberg - email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Time exists so that not everything happens at once." - Unknown