From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-ID: <8ccc8ba40609051403x657fc309r8c6a3108c86095f3@mail.gmail.com> Date: Tue, 5 Sep 2006 23:03:07 +0200 From: "Francisco J Ballesteros" To: "Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs" <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: [9fans] Aquarela usage In-Reply-To: <676c3c4f0609051353l56b7c49en774533c5367ef8a4@mail.gmail.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline References: <3e1162e60609051246t3e998acue95f0d5e1ce6036@mail.gmail.com> <389c17129690a05fbe05f68b696f372c@hamnavoe.com> <3e1162e60609051329j685b00bdv72c953821cc1869@mail.gmail.com> <676c3c4f0609051338q96ef096je3ae10a4db0b09fb@mail.gmail.com> <3e1162e60609051341o3ca60214k720f63063830a8f6@mail.gmail.com> <676c3c4f0609051353l56b7c49en774533c5367ef8a4@mail.gmail.com> Topicbox-Message-UUID: af4cf994-ead1-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 anyone actually exporting nfs from plan 9 to linux? Or are you all using the linux 9p implementation? thanks On 9/5/06, Richard Bilson wrote: > On 9/5/06, David Leimbach wrote: > > On 9/5/06, Richard Bilson wrote: > > > I've never had to add any special keys in order to access an aquarela > > > share from a Windows machine -- I can connect to the share using the > > > same password I use for drawterm. > > > > > > > I've been trying that, drawterm works, aquarela isn't working. > > > > > I have also never had a need for aquarela's -n flag. > > > > > > > I'm trying to connect to the local filesystem using \\ip\local or > > smb:///local. > > > > So far no luck. Do I have to do something special to /n in the > > namespace I launch aquarela in? > > > > Dave > > If your problem is authentication, no. But if your credentials are > accepted, my message from July 18th might be relevant: > > > On 7/14/06, Richard Bilson wrote: > > > > > > I assume that "\\host\local" is supposed to refer to some namespace > > > constructed for the authenticated user. Probably it should contain > > > files and such. How do I achieve this? > > > > Ok, I figured this out. "\\host\local" refers to "/n/local". But, by > > default, there is nothing mounted at or bound to /n/local. Putting > > "bind / /n/local" into /lib/namespace.local gives me the behavior I > > expected. > > I was going to find somewhere in the wiki to put this, but I'm still > not completely sure that this is the way it's meant to work. Of > course, it's nice and flexible in the sense that you can create a > custom namespace for use by smb clients, but it ought to be > documented. > > One way to make sure that the authentication is working is to browse > \\host\sources or \\host\dump, or another share name corresponding to > a 9fs argument. > >