Mount Map Uid at Sarah Blevins blog

Mount Map Uid. if you have a kernel >5.12 and on a supported filesystem (ext4 should be fine, but btrfs support wasn't added until 5.15), you can. This will give you read only access based on the configured permissions of the nfs share. a regular linux nfs server would do the trick with the following combination of /etc/exportfs options:. You can add to your /etc/idmapd.conf [translation]. i want to mount the device /dev/sda3 to the directory /foo/bar/baz. After mounting the directory should have the uid of user. the typical way you will see an nfs share mounted in windows involves mounting the remote file system using the anonymous (anon) user: nfs4 does not use uid numbers but usernames.

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nfs4 does not use uid numbers but usernames. After mounting the directory should have the uid of user. i want to mount the device /dev/sda3 to the directory /foo/bar/baz. the typical way you will see an nfs share mounted in windows involves mounting the remote file system using the anonymous (anon) user: a regular linux nfs server would do the trick with the following combination of /etc/exportfs options:. if you have a kernel >5.12 and on a supported filesystem (ext4 should be fine, but btrfs support wasn't added until 5.15), you can. This will give you read only access based on the configured permissions of the nfs share. You can add to your /etc/idmapd.conf [translation].

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Mount Map Uid You can add to your /etc/idmapd.conf [translation]. nfs4 does not use uid numbers but usernames. a regular linux nfs server would do the trick with the following combination of /etc/exportfs options:. i want to mount the device /dev/sda3 to the directory /foo/bar/baz. if you have a kernel >5.12 and on a supported filesystem (ext4 should be fine, but btrfs support wasn't added until 5.15), you can. the typical way you will see an nfs share mounted in windows involves mounting the remote file system using the anonymous (anon) user: After mounting the directory should have the uid of user. You can add to your /etc/idmapd.conf [translation]. This will give you read only access based on the configured permissions of the nfs share.

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