Professional web hosting - 728 Part V . Running Servers The following
728 Part V . Running Servers The following steps explain how to turn on the autofs facility: 1. As root user from a Terminal window, open the /etc/auto.master file and uncomment the last line, so it appears as follows: /net /etc/auto.net This causes the /net directory to act as the mount point for the NFS shared directories you want to access on the network. 2. Start the autofs service by typing the following as root user: # /etc/init.d/autofs start 3. On a Fedora system, set up the autofs service to restart every time you boot your system: # chkconfig autofs on Believe it or not, that s all you have to do. If you have a network connection to the NFS servers from which you want to share directories, try to access a shared NFS directory. For example, if you know that the /usr/local/share directory is being shared from the computer on your network named shuttle, you can do the following: $ cd /net/shuttle If that computer has any shared directories that are available to you, you can successfully change to that directory. You also can type the following: $ ls usr You should be able to see that the usr directory is part of the path to a shared directory. If there were shared directories from other top-level directories (such as /var or /tmp), you would see those as well. Of course, seeing any of those directories depends on how security is set up on the server. Try going straight to the shared directory as well. For example: $ cd /net/shuttle/usr/local/share $ ls info man music television At this point, the ls should reveal the contents of the /usr/local/share directory on the computer named shuttle. What you can do with that content depends on how it was configured for sharing by the server.
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