|
|
If
mount
fails for any reason, check the sections below
for specific details about what to do.
They are arranged according to where they occur in
the mounting sequence and are labeled with the error message
likely to be displayed.
mount: can't open /etc/mnttabmount: / is already mounted, name is busy, or allowable number of mount points exceeded: Device busy (error 16)The requested filesystem is already mounted.
mount: name or name, no such file or directoryThis message also appears when the specified local mount point is not an existing directory.
mount: can't open /etc/default/filesysnot in hosts databasemount: directory argument name must be a full pathnamemount: ... server not responding(1): RPC_PMAP_FAILURE - RPC_TIMED_OUT
If the resulting display does not show the portmapper, stop and
restart NFS on the server with these commands:
nfs stop
nfs start
If the server is up but it is not possible to reach it using ping, check the client's network connection by trying to ping another machine. Also, check the server's network connection.
mount: ... server not responding: RPC_PROG_NOT_REGISTEREDmount: /dev/nfsd or directory_name, no such file or directorymount: access denied for sys_name:nameIf the desired filesystem is not in the list or the machine name is not in the user list for the filesystem, then check the /etc/exports file on the server for the correct filesystem entry. A filesystem name that appears in the /etc/exports file but not in the output from showmount indicates a failure in mountd. Perhaps it could not read that line in the file, or it could not find the filesystem, or else the filesystem name was not a locally mounted filesystem. See exportfs(NADM) and exports(NF) for more information.
This message can also be an indication that authentication
failed on the server.
It may be displayed because the machine that is attempting the mount
is not in the server's export list; check the server's
/etc/exports file.
mount: name: no such file or directorymount: not super user