On Wed, 07 Oct 2009 10:47:36 -0400 Tom Horsley wrote: > On Wed, 7 Oct 2009 10:35:40 -0400 > Tom Horsley wrote: > > > Do I have to edit every NFS mount line in my > > fstab manually? > > Apparently I do :-(. I can only mount from older machines > if I explicitly give "proto=udp" as a mount option, at > least none of the other work-arounds I've tried have worked. I just discovered that I have the same problem here. This computer is supposed to mount two fileservers. One of the fileservers runs Centos 5 and the other is an Intel SS-4000E (a dedicated fileserver that runs its own embedded Linux). The Centos 5 server mounted fine, but the Intel fileserver failed. My fstab is set up as follows: fileserver:/nas/NASDisk-00002/files/ /mnt/fileserver nfs defaults 0 0 After rebooting my computer last night when it finished updating to nfs-utils-1.2.0-5.fc11.x86_64 the fileserver failed to mount. I found out about it this morning when my overnight backup to the fileserver failed to work. Running the mount command from the commandline tells me this: QUOTE: [root@mutt frankcox]# mount fileserver:/nas/NASDisk-00002/files/ /mnt/fileserver mount.nfs: requested NFS version or transport protocol is not supported END OF QUOTE: Using the suggested option "-o proto=udp", it mounted fine. QUOTE: [root@mutt frankcox]# mount -o proto=udp fileserver:/nas/NASDisk-00002/files/ /mnt/fileserver END OF QUOTE That worked and my Intel fileserver is now present on this computer again. -- MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Melville Sask ~ http://www.melvilletheatre.com -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines