Could Not Mount Image
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@Tom-Elliott said:
Teamveiwer
That would be awesome! Thanks! I could do a teamviewer session. Are you just wanting to see the management console or are you wanting to actually get on the linux box?
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I ran into this before too. Check that nfs-server is running by running:
systemctl status nfs-server
If it’s not, you can manually start it with:
systemctl start nfs-server
This enables the service to start automatically on next boot, but it should already be enabled…
systemctl enable nfs-server
Which brings me to telling you to follow this guide on delaying the FOG services to fix the problem:
https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Fedora_21_Server#Set_the_FOG_services_to_start_30_seconds_after_bootI needed to also add “systemctl start FOGPingHosts” to the rc.local on my CentOS 7 installation.
Two commands you can use to easily see what is/isn’t running on your CentOS 7 installation are:
pstree
&
systemctl list-units --type=service
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Hello – I’m having a similar issue. I don’t want to hijack the thread, but I have checked to make sure the NFS server service has been started, and it has. If I boot into debug mode and check the current working directory, I am in the root directory – there seems to be no /images path. Again, not sure if it’s related, but I’m having the same problem.
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Also ensure that all of the FOG services are running by entering:
systemctl list-units --type=service
You should see see all five Fog services in my screenshot as loaded, active, and running:
Another issue I’ve seen is the nfs-server service will show that it is running, but will be inactive and exited. Also double check that isn’t the case, because it will at a glance look as though it is loaded when you check status.
To verify the Images directory exists, try the following:
cd cd /images ls
You should be within the directory and able to see at least a directory called dev and postdownloadscripts.
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@jgurka, here is a list of my running services. A few are stopped; do you suppose these are crucial processes?
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It looks like you’re on CentOS 6 – I was assuming you were on 7 earlier. Is this the latest trunk build of FOG, btw?
I don’t think the stopped FOG services are crucial for what your problem is, but I’d start them back up anyway:
service FOGPingHosts start service FOGSnapinReplicator start
It looks like you have the IPv6 firewall still enabled…this might potentially be causing the problem? I’d go ahead and disable it:
service ip6tables stop chkconfig ip6tables off
Try it again and see if it made any difference.
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@Vasahond said:
I am in the root directory – there seems to be no /images path.
Really? If that’s the case, that’s almost surely the problem. Can you please post the output of
find / | grep /dev/.mntcheck
Also, what output/errors do you get when you re-run the installer? You’ve also not specifically stated what version of FOG you’re using, we need this information as well.
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Vasahond’s running services output seems to show it as existing and being mounted via NFS:
Configured NFS mountpoints: /images /images/dev Active NFS mountpoints: /images /images/dev
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@jgurka Yeah I saw that, but the directory could still be missing. I’m most concerned with him not seeing a
/images
directory on his server.As a test, I just created a directory called
/image
and exported it in/etc/exports
, and restarted rpcbind and nfs-server and saw that NFS was running fine, I then deleted the/image
directory and then again checked NFS… still running fine. You’ll also hopefully understand that I have been bitten many times by making assumptions about things. No telling what the guy has copy/pasted into his server trying to get it to work. -
I definitely get where you’re coming from.
You can try running this to see whether or not /images actually exists:
[ -d /images ] && echo 'Directory Found' || echo 'Directory /images not found'
You should see "Directory Found’ if it does in fact exist.
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@jgurka People like @george1421 suggest to put the images in /opt/fog/images, which is why I suggested searching for /dev/.mntcheck
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Hello, i think i’ve got the same problem except i made modification on the web interface :
i didnt want the “images” directory be at the root (/images)
then i copy the images directory into /home/images.Then i modify the image path on the web interface, i thought it would modify the export file also but it seems not.
then i had to modify manualy the export file. Now it works fine.
Could it be the problem ? -
The images directory needs to have full r/w/x permissions in order for FOG to use it – did you make sure to change the permissions when you created the new directory and copied the contents of the old /images?
To check the directory permissions, run the following:
cd /home ls -la #You want permissions on the new images directory to be drwxrwxrwx and also on sub-directories
To enable full r/w/x permissions on the folder, run the following:
chmod -R 777 /home/images #-R will run it recursively to apply the permission changes to sub-directories as well as the top directory
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I tried this and still nothing. I did find that I had an incorrect path list on the the image path under Storage management. I created a directory here: /home/fog/Images, applied the appropriate permissions and corrected the path under the storage management.
Still have the same message appearing.
Could not mount images folder (/bin/fog.upload) -
@bberrelez said:
I tried this and still nothing. I did find that I had an incorrect path list on the the image path under Storage management. I created a directory here: /home/fog/Images, applied the appropriate permissions and corrected the path under the storage management.
Still have the same message appearing.
Could not mount images folder (/bin/fog.upload)Need to know information! Lol
You need to modify/etc/exports
to reflect the correct path. Then reboot. -
@bberrelez Can you ensure the .mntcheck files are in the /home/fog/images and /home/fog/images/dev files? Also, does the /home/fog/images/dev folder exist?
From the sounds of it, you switched to /home/fog/images after /images was already created.
Based on all of this, I’m also just guessing that this was a fresh install, and there were no images in /images.
Basically, if I can follow the issue at all:
You ran:
mkdir /home/fog/images mkdir /home/fog/images/dev
If you don’t have the dev folder in /home/fog/images, you’ll also fail as the mount literally fails (no such directory).
If you do have the dev folder, then run this on your fog server as root:
mkdir -p /home/fog/images/dev touch /home/fog/images/.mntcheck touch /home/fog/images/dev/.mntcheck
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I just experienced this exact issue - problem was NFS and RPC was starting up before network is even ready. I fixed it by delaying their start by 30 seconds.
Here are instructions for that for Fedora, should be awful similar (if not exactly the same) for CentOS7 - https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php?title=Fedora_21_Server#Set_the_FOG_services_to_start_30_seconds_after_boot
My old fog server didn’t have this issue because it was slower and sort of handicapped (hence the rebuild), my new fog server is viciously fast, and can reboot in under 10 seconds…
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@bberrelez Can you take a better photo of the error for wiki purposes? Please? Otherwise I’ll need to wait for someone else to post a picture of the same error.
wiki
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@Wayne-Workman HI Wayne know this is an old call but stumbled upon it when I had the same issue.
You were after a decent photo of the error for the wiki which I’ve not been able to get and adding in a codebox below just screws up but hopefully this workaround of text on a black background in notepad++ will do the trick
Also in my case for anyone else finding this later on I had moved the images directory to /home/fog/images and updated fog everywhere except for the /etc/exports file.
Amending that to read as
/home/fog/images *(ro,sync,no_wdelay,no_subtree_check,insecure_locks,no_root_squash,insecure,fsid=0) /home/fog/images/dev *(rw,async,no_wdelay,no_subtree_check,no_root_squash,insecure,fsid=1)
And then running
exportfs -a
bypassed the error for me,.
cheers kiweegie.
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