Hi Frank. I'm suspecting your network or your network adapter or the driver you use. Can you try to transfer big file (>10Mo) between your file server and your centos ? Using another protocol like : ftp, sftp, scp, http ? Can you connect your centos on a different network plug, using a different cable ? Can you install an other network adapter ? On 9/22/07, Frank Cox <theatre@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I have a weird NFS problem here. > > I am trying to set up a machine with Centos 5 on it. First time I've tried > Centos, but it looks like it's going to be the real thing for some machines > that I look after that are intended to be long-term "just works" application > servers. I plan to start reading and participating in this mailing list now, > so Hello to everyone! My name is Frank Cox and I own and operate the Melville > Theatre in Melville Saskatchewan, Canada. > > My first attempt to install Centos 5 was from ISO files that I put > on my fileserver, which is the method that I use to install Fedora. Boot off a > boot CD, point it to the appropriate directrory on the fileserver, and let 'er > rip. > > That didn't work this time. I got to the point where I told the boot CD where > to find the ISO files on the fileserver, and the whole thing hung up. I found > an error message on one of the consoles that said something to the effect of > "server fileserver not responding, still trying". And that's as far as I got. > I tried this a half-dozen times with the same result. > > I thought maybe it just didn't like my fileserver for some reason, so I put the > ISO files on another of my computers and set up an NFS share on that computer. > > Same thing again. > > I gave up and put Centos 5 onto CD's, booted from CD number 1 and just swapped > CD's until I'm done. I thought that solved everything but now I have something > even weirder. > > I mounted my fileserver like this: > > mount fileserver:/nas/NASDisk-00002/files /mnt/fileserver > > That's exactly the same way that I mount it on my Fedora machines. > > The fileserver mounts without error, and it appears at first glance to work. I > can "cd /mnt/fileserver/where-ever" and use ls to view the files that are in > the directories. > > However, if I try to read the files on the fileserver, my terminal hangs up. > All I can do is view the directories on my fileserver. Doing anything > that reads any file on the fileserver locks up my terminal. > > Logging in again from another terminal and viewing /var/log/messages tells me > this: > > nfs: server fileserver not responding, still trying > > > This appears to be the same problem that I had when I was installing the > operating system. Normally if the installer can't find the NFS share due to a > typo or whatever, it just tells me "Can't find the images" and that's all there > is to it. But the installer hung up at the point where it was supposed to > start reading the images so I think it could find them but couldn't read them > either. > > This exact same procedure works fine from my Fedora machines. > > What in the world is going on here? If I can't get NFS to work on this > machine I'm going to be up the creek because I use LTSP on it to run several > terminals. > > I haven't tried web browsing from that machine yet, but the ethernet card is > obviously working because I did a "yum update" and a few "yum installs" with no > problem. It is an Intel motherboard and CPU with integrated everything. > > I strongly suspect that I'm doing something stupid here and can't see the > obvious. Can someone give me a steer? > > Thanks in advance for any assistance. > > > -- > MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Melville Sask ~ http://www.melvilletheatre.com > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > -- Alain Spineux aspineux gmail com May the sources be with you _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos