install the NFS client package.
Have a look at adding a line to the
/etc/fstab file. Then reboot to take effect.
Check this out:
https://linuxize.com/post/how-to-mount-an-nfs-share-in-linux/
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install the NFS client package.
Have a look at adding a line to the
/etc/fstab file. Then reboot to take effect.
Check this out:
https://linuxize.com/post/how-to-mount-an-nfs-share-in-linux/
Thanks! That's a great reference and I'll keep that in my bookmarks 👍
Eventually (with help from others) I mounted the share with
sudo mount -o rw,soft,intr,nfsvers=4 192.your.NAS.IP:/volumeNAME/some-path /nfs
(I don't put it on my fstab to save a bit of wear on my NAS)
Cheers!
You're welcome.
I've not thought about nor worried about wear and tear. I did a search but didn't find anything. Are you just being cautious? Or perhaps you only access files occasionally?
Either way, you may want to creat a bash alias in your .bashrc file so that you can type a simple command like mountnas or 'nas' and you might have another to run the umount command to unmount it.
Since my NAS runs my camera recordings and backups and some containers, I figure wear from mounting conveniently shouldn't be an issue...
Cheers!
Hi again !
You guessed right: I indeed use those files on my computer very occasionally and I'd rather make a shortcut / alias (like you rightly suggested) than mounting the share at every boot. True, if you have quality disks (which are getting more difficult to find nowadays) you shouldn't be worried about wear.
On a side note I could do my tag editing just fine, thanks again for your help!
Cheers! Thanks for your reply.
Lemmy folks are nicer folks :)
Have a good day