tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5188121942175615593.post4078238951868471854..comments2024-03-29T01:51:12.527+11:00Comments on Lindqvist -- a blog about Linux and Science. Mostly.: 62. Sharing a folder between computers using nfs on Debianlindqvisthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11525548328692436184noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5188121942175615593.post-66071675386796798902013-01-06T09:05:51.338+11:002013-01-06T09:05:51.338+11:00Cheers JBzh,
yes, the /shared *... is from an earl...Cheers JBzh,<br />yes, the /shared *... is from an earlier iteration of the post and should be /home/me/shared. Thanks for pointing that out.<br /><br />I'll update the post with a few pointers about the lack of security. On my cluster I'm only accepting NFS connections from my local subnet and on my dedicated subnet NIC, so it's not been a worry for me. That's obviously not true in those cases where people are using it as an equivalent for SMB.lindqvisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11525548328692436184noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5188121942175615593.post-6432483639787075432013-01-06T05:31:06.631+11:002013-01-06T05:31:06.631+11:00Edit /etc/exports by adding a line to the end of t...Edit /etc/exports by adding a line to the end of the file<br />/shared *(rw,sync)<br /><br />That makes your shared directory accessible by any computer. If your server is connected to the Internet and NFS ports are opened, anyone can read/write on your disk.<br /><br />BTW did you mean :<br />/home/me/shared *(rw,sync)JBzhhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05083899877651246488noreply@blogger.com