Unbale to move /images/dev ....
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Folder /images is on a virtual machine; maybe I can change hard drive’s capacity ?
If not, how create a symbolic link to a mount point ? -
This post is deleted! -
Expanding the Drive’s capacity “might” work, but it’s no guarantee. If it’s a base install of Ubuntu, typically the expansion would go to /home not /images, unless you know how to extend that particular partition.
If you have a network file share (NFS) somewhere that you can mount/generate in place of /images, all you’d need to do is mount it in your /etc/fstab. Or you can do the symbolic link.
I do mine in a two step method, for security and obscurity.
First, i mount my share as /somethingrandomImadeup
Then I link /somethingrandomImadeup to /images.
Verify the permissions are good and I’m off and away.
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The symbolic link to a mount point seems to be easier !
I have at my disposal a NAS server and to stock images, it would be the ideal …So, in /etc/fstab, I wrote:
/images NAS-IP/images auto bind,defaults 0 0
In some errors near, did I understand principle of symbolic link ?
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With the method you’re using, you wouldn’t need a symbolic link itself. Just setup /etc/fstab like you have:
I think the syntax is slightly backward:
Try this in the fstab:
[code]<IP-OF-NAS>:/images /images auto bind,defaults 0 0[/code]
The only thing you’d need to make sure of, after images is mount is make sure permissions are correct and the .mntcheck files exist.
So reboot the system,
Verify that the /images directory is mounted:
[code]cd /images
df -h ./[/code]You should see available space of the NAS if all worked properly.
Then perform these steps:
[code]chmod -R 777 /images
mkdir /images/dev
touch /images/.mntcheck
touch /images/dev/.mntcheck[/code]Hopefully all works great for you.
Thanks,
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Okay, I’m going to test all this and I will say you results !
Thank you Tom !
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My symbolic link in /etc/fstab doesn’t work:
XX.XX44.22:/fog@gof2014/fog/images /images auto bind,defaults 0 0
(fog@gof2014 is the login to connect to NAS)It doesn’t work because when I execute a df -h ./ command, it returns always the same result:
/dev/disk/by-uuid/7e4aba7b-9902-4068-9740-4ec3e2a90430 323M 184M 122M 61% /
(line which corresponds:/ was on /dev/sda1 during installation
UUID=7e4aba7b-9902-4068-9740-4ec3e2a90430 / ext4 errors=remount-ro 0 1)
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What happens if you type the command:
[code]mount /images[/code] -
It returns:
mount : le périphérique spécial 10.132.44.22:/fog@gof2014/fog/images doesn’t existIt’s an error in the definition of my NAS, isn’t it ?
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On your NAS, do you have a folder called /fog/images?
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Yes I have.
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Is this being shared as a samba share?
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No it doesn’t seem to me…
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Is it being shared as NFS then?
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How to know it ?
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Try this for your /etc/fstab line:
[code] //10.132.44.22/fog/images /images cifs defaults,username=fog,password=gof2014 0 0[/code]
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I tested with:
//10…
\10…
10…
None works.Ideas ???