On Thu, 2005-07-07 at 11:22 -0400, Eric Kerin wrote: > > What happens is exacly what you describe. Exports come up all in one go, > > then the IP address. > > But then, a split second later all exports except the one I have in > > /etc/exports are gone. It's as if something has done 'exportfs -r'. I'll > > have to look into this. Could be my own config problem, as I restart the > > lockd when bringing up the service. However the exports are all there > > when I reboot and let the services come up automatically, and if my > > script is the culprit it should behave the same way then, shouldn't it? > > > Just because I'm curious, why do you restart lockd? Are you restarting > any other nfs related services from rgmanager? > > > Of my 9 export entries in cluster.conf only 5 > > get tested and reexported after disappearing. As I said they are all > > there if I reboot and let the service come up automatically. > > > It'd be interesting to see the relevant section of your cluster.conf > file. Also you don't have any of the filesystems you are exporting in > the cluster setup in /etc/exports, do you? ... and /etc/exports. If the cluster is for some reason unexporting stuff in /etc/exports which it shouldn't, it's a bug. e.g.: If you have /mnt/clusterexport in cluster.conf as an NFS export, and you have "/tmp" as an export in /etc/exports - and the "/tmp" export is dissappearing, that's a bug. If you have /mnt/clusterexport in both cluster.conf and /etc/exports, ... that's a config problem. Let the cluster manage the stuff you intend to export from the cluster. =) -- Lon -- Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster