I've got two computers on a small home LAN. One is my Debian "workstation" and the other is an OpenBSD firewall/NAT "server." I have some NFS shares on the OpenBSD box which I would like to have mounted (on the Debian system) at boot time.
So I have some entries in /etc/fstab like the following: septictank:/wrk/mp3 /nfs/mp3 nfs 0 0 Where "septictank" is the name of the OpenBSD system. When my system boots, these shares are not mounted. Doing a "dmesg" I noticed the following line: nfs warning: mount version older than kernel However, I can mount these NFS shares manually by doing something such as the following: mount -t nfs septictank:/wrk/mp3 /nfs/mp3 I.e. doing it manually works fine. Any thoughts here? Matt -- Matt Garman, [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Do you think that it would be too much to say that two hours of the working time of every efficient member of a community goes to feed the red fiend of war?" --Upton Sinclair, _The_Jungle_