On Tue, 2007-10-02 at 22:39 +0530, Sudheer Satyanarayana wrote: > I'm using FC6 and GNOME. I had shortcut to an NFS shared folder on my > desktop. Today I clicked the shortcut folder icon on the desktop and > nautilus and desktop froze. I can't launch nautilus. The icons on the > desktop are not visible either. Nothing happens when I right click on > the desktop. Apparently the NFS server is down. I tried > CTRL+ALT+Backspace and then swithing to runlevel 3 and back to runlevel 5. > > I still can't launch nautilus and my desktop is blackened. How can I > resolve this? I've come across that before. I had to forcefully kill some mount points to break it. Though I'm surprised you got that far, I'd found it'd jam up long before I even got a desktop. Now, I don't have NFS mounts where they might get read during start up (desktop folders, menu entries), I use a sub-directory, where remote mounts will only get accessed when I actually intend to. e.g. ~/server/data ~/server/shared ^ remote mount ^sub-dir Even trying to boot a system where you've got unreachable NFS mounts in your fstab file can be a problem. For systems that aren't always on my network, I gave up on that and made use of the auto-mounting system. They're mounted on demand, when you try to access them through the /net/ folder. e.g. /net/server-name/shared-folder-name -- (This box runs FC5, my others run FC4 & FC6, in case that's important to the thread.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list