Red Hat NETSCAPE ENTREPRISE SERVER 6.0 - ADMINISTRATOR Specifications Page 223

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Networking Issues
Appendix C Troubleshooting SnapServers 207
port on the SnapServer. To resolve this problem, verify that all settings (if using
multiple Ethernet ports) on the switch/hub match the setting on the server. When
the server is shipped from the factory, both ports are set to autonegotiate. Therefore,
the switch/hub must be set to autonegotiate to initially connect to the server.
The NT Event Viewer Reports Forced Master Browser Election When
SnapServers Are Online
SnapServers have the ability to act as a master browser on a Microsoft network. This
may cause a message to appear in an NT server's event log about a forced master
browser election.
SnapServers should lose elections to Windows domain controllers (NT/2K/2K3),
but win against standalone Windows servers (NT/2K/2K3) and workstations (all
versions); however, users often prefer to prevent this election entirely.
The master browser option is enabled by default on SnapServers to allow them to
appear more rapidly in a peer-to-peer Windows environment. In some
environments that include NT server systems, this may cause the NT server to show
warnings about having to force a master browser election in the event log. You can
prevent these warning messages by disabling the Master Browser option on the
Network > Windows screen.
You Try to Mount to a Share on Your SnapServer from Your Linux Workstation
and You Receive an RPC Timeout Message
Check the firewall configuration to your Linux workstation. Be sure you have not
blocked the ability to receive TCP or User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
communications. If problems persist, contact Overland Storage Technical Support.
You Receive an Access Denied Message When Attempting to Mount a Share
on Your SnapServer from a Linux Workstation
If you are logged in as root on your workstation and NFS is enabled on your
SnapServer, this message can be misleading, causing you to look for security issues,
when in fact it could be a command syntax issue. For example, the common Linux
mount command:
mount 192.168.32.124:SHARE1 /mnt
is missing a forward slash (/) in the command, which will return an Access Denied
message. The correct syntax should be the following:
mount 192.168.32.124:/SHARE1 /mnt
Note The share name is case sensitive.
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