you *could* make that happen easily.
There is the base root volume in cDOT (/) where all junctions usually form. You would have to set the export-policy on the root volume to something that is writeable by a client. Mount the root of the cdot filer and create the EMPTY volume call vol. That is your place holder.
Then, when "mounting" a junction in cdot, do something like:
vol mount -volume share_01 -junction-path /vol/share_01
and it should work. I did this in a past job with hundreds of volumes so I can tell you it works. You just need to make sure your export-policies are set the way you want/need and be sure to limit the root volume export-policy when you are done.
--tmac
*Tim McCarthy, **Principal Consultant*
RHCE6 110-107-141 https://www.redhat.com/wapps/training/certification/verify.html?certNumber=110-107-141&isSearch=False&verify=Verify Current until Aug 02, 2016
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 7:05 AM, Momonth momonth@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I wonder if it's possible to employ 7Mode mount point behavior on cDOT NFS SVM?
An example:
- I create a volume "share_01" and by default it shows up as
"toaster:/share_01".
- I'd like to access it as "toaset:/vol/share_01"
So, my question is how to add "/vol/" to its junction_path?
Cheers, Vladimir _______________________________________________ Toasters mailing list Toasters@teaparty.net http://www.teaparty.net/mailman/listinfo/toasters