On Wed, Mar 9, 2011 at 1:19 PM, Tom H <tomh0665@gmail.com
<mailto:tomh0665@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Wed, Mar 9, 2011 at 2:28 AM, Scott Ferguson
<prettyfly.productions@gmail.com
<mailto:prettyfly.productions@gmail.com>> wrote:
> On 09/03/11 17:45, Liam Cassidey wrote:
>>
>> I've removed all entries from /etc/exports, have portmap and
nfs-common
>> running, the firewall down, have an empty /etc/hosts.deny
and a single
>> entry in hosts.allow (taken from the portmap man page):
>
> perhaps you could try something like this for hosts.allow
>
> nfsd: 192.168.x.y/255.255.255.255 <http://255.255.255.255>
> rpcbind: 192.168.x.y/255.255.255.255 <http://255.255.255.255>
> mountd: 192.168.x.y/255.255.255.255 <http://255.255.255.255>
Or test first with an empty "/etc/hosts.allow".
So I've tested it with an empty /etc/hosts.allow, one with ALL: ALL
and I feel like every incarnation involving nfsd, rpcbind, mountd,
portmap and various ip's and masks. None seem to make any difference
to the results I'm seeing so far -- still the same old "svc: failed
to register lockdv1 RPC service (errno 13)." error.
Also, iptables has been completely disabled so there shouldn't be
anything at the network layer blocking it.
It's been suggested that their may be a bug in the version of
nfs-common I'm using. I have version 1:1.2.2-4 installed and it
appears, at least according to
http://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=nfs-common, that this
same version is also in stable. So I guess my next question is: has
anyone had luck running an nfs server on any system since lenny? If
so, what versions of the 3 (portmap, nfs-common, and
nfs-kernel-server) are you running and with what kind of configuration?
Thanks for all the support so far.