On 1/5/24 04:54, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Marco Moock <m...@dorfdsl.de> wrote:
Am 04.01.2024 um 18:19:57 Uhr schrieb Pocket:
Where can I find information on how to configure NFS to use ipv6
addresses both server and client.
Does IPv6 work basically on your machine, including name resolution?
Does it work if you enter the address directly?
https://ipv6.net/blog/mounting-an-nfs-share-over-ipv6/
How does your fstab look like?
plus FWIW...
https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E23824_01/html/821-1453/ipv6-ref-71.html
"NFS software and Remote Procedure Call (RPC) software support IPv6 in a
seamless manner. Existing commands that are related to NFS services
have not changed. Most RPC applications also run on IPv6 without any
change. Some advanced RPC applications with transport knowledge might
require updates."
According to debian docs NFSServerSetup from the debian wiki
Additionally, rpcbind is not strictly needed by NFSv4 but will be
started as a prerequisite by nfs-server.service. This can be
prevented by masking rpcbind.service and rpcbind.socket.
sudo systemctl mask rpcbind.service
sudo systemctl mask rpcbind.socket
I am going to do that to use NFSv4 only.
I believe that my issue is the in the /etc/exports file but I don't know
for sure.
I have this in the exports, ipv4 works
/srv/Multimedia 192.168.1.0/24(rw,no_root_squash,subtree_check)
/srv/Other 192.168.1.0/24(rw,no_root_squash,subtree_check)
#/home 2002:474f:e945:0:0:0:0:0/64(rw,no_root_squash,subtree_check)
I am looking for an example
I have commented out the ipv6 for now because I want to use NFSv4 only
and after I get that working I want to get ipv6 mounts working and
change the ipv4 mounts to use ipv6.
/srv/Multimedia and /srv/Other are root mounts and there isn't any bind
mounts
--
Hindi madali ang maging ako