Difference between revisions of "Setting-up an NFS client for just one user"
From Supercomputación y Cálculo Científico UIS
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− | - | + | The following procedure allows NFS to work for a single user or a set of them, without using NIS or LDAP authentication. |
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+ | 1. Create a group in the target (client) machine. In this example gid_number and GroupName represent the gid and name of the group in the server machine, with exact capitalisation. | ||
+ | {{Command|<nowiki>groupadd -gid gid_number GroupName --force-badname</nowiki> | ||
+ | 2. Create a user in the target (client) machine. In this example ID and UserName represent the uid and name of the user in the server machine and gid_number the gid of the previously created group, with exact capitalisation. | ||
+ | {{Command|<nowiki>useradd -gid gid_number UserName --uid ID --force-badname</nowiki>}} | ||
+ | 3. Test the setup by mounting. | ||
+ | 4. Edit /etc/fstab accordingly. |
Revision as of 22:06, 5 September 2014
Back to NFS
The following procedure allows NFS to work for a single user or a set of them, without using NIS or LDAP authentication.
1. Create a group in the target (client) machine. In this example gid_number and GroupName represent the gid and name of the group in the server machine, with exact capitalisation. {{Command|groupadd -gid gid_number GroupName --force-badname 2. Create a user in the target (client) machine. In this example ID and UserName represent the uid and name of the user in the server machine and gid_number the gid of the previously created group, with exact capitalisation.
useradd -gid gid_number UserName --uid ID --force-badname
3. Test the setup by mounting. 4. Edit /etc/fstab accordingly.