Yes. You can use nfs. The port number is 2049, I think. You'll have to run the nfs server on the host with the drive and then you'll need to export the file system via exportfs. You can do a man of exportfs to get the syntax. You should also do a man nfsd. You can actually have it listen on any port you want if you run it yourself. Don't run it as root. That would be insecure. The two manpages I mentioned will also lead you to some interesting reading on the subject.
Regards,
Drew
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Buehler [mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, February 27, 2004 9:25 AM
To: redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: mounting a remote drive
I am not sure if this is possible or not, but I am hoping that it is. I am
running a local Redhat Linux 3.x server and have a *nix based remote server
that has Samba setup on it. Is there a way to mount the remote drive to
the local server? If so, can you lead me to the right directions for doing
this? The remote server is behind a firewall, so if it is possible, I
would also need to know the ports to open up on the firewall to allow me in.
Thanks in Advance
Steve
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