Hello,
I'm not a Mac user yet (hopefully soon), but I'm asking this because I want to make sure it's possible.
I have tried to find an answer to this using google, but I haven't been able to find any simple answer to this (or I have misunderstood something). I presume that it's possible, otherwise it would be irrational.
Anyway the question is:
Let's imagine a situation that we have a Linux Box running nfsd. The Linux Box contains /home/userx -directories.
Now I want to use that Linux Boxes /home/userx -directory as Mac OS X /users nfs mounted homedirectory tree (in other words: /users -directory on Linux /home via NFS).
Now, let's assume that everything is set up in Linux Box.
What needs to be done in Mac OS X that when I boot it up, it automatically mounts the /users -directory as users' home when one logs in (is there any HOWTO available)?
One other thing that I didn't find was, the specification of directory tree of Mac OS X (same kind of documentation as Filesystem Hierarchy Standard).
cheers,
Ari
..and one more thing, it's about The HFS+ -filesystem, is it journalling filesystem?
I'm not a Mac user yet (hopefully soon), but I'm asking this because I want to make sure it's possible.
I have tried to find an answer to this using google, but I haven't been able to find any simple answer to this (or I have misunderstood something). I presume that it's possible, otherwise it would be irrational.
Anyway the question is:
Let's imagine a situation that we have a Linux Box running nfsd. The Linux Box contains /home/userx -directories.
Now I want to use that Linux Boxes /home/userx -directory as Mac OS X /users nfs mounted homedirectory tree (in other words: /users -directory on Linux /home via NFS).
Now, let's assume that everything is set up in Linux Box.
What needs to be done in Mac OS X that when I boot it up, it automatically mounts the /users -directory as users' home when one logs in (is there any HOWTO available)?
One other thing that I didn't find was, the specification of directory tree of Mac OS X (same kind of documentation as Filesystem Hierarchy Standard).
cheers,
Ari
..and one more thing, it's about The HFS+ -filesystem, is it journalling filesystem?