- What's New
- Function Overview
- Service Overview
-
Billing
- Billing Overview
- Billing Modes
- Billed Items
- Billing Examples
- Billing Mode Changes
- Renewing Subscriptions
- Bills
- Arrears
- Billing Termination
- Cost Management
-
Billing FAQ
- How Do I Purchase SFS?
- How Do I Renew the Service?
- How Do I Check Whether the Subscriber Is in Arrears?
- Can I Purchase SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Packages When I Still Have Valid Ones in Use?
- How Do I Check the Usage of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- How Do I Adjust the Size of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- Do SFS Capacity-Oriented and SFS Turbo Share One Resource Package?
- Getting Started
- User Guide
- Best Practices
-
API Reference
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- Calling General Purpose File System APIs
- Getting Started (SFS Capacity-Oriented)
- Getting Started with SFS Turbo
- Getting Started with General Purpose File System
-
SFS Capacity-Oriented APIs
- API Version Queries
- File Systems
- File System Access Rules
- Quota Management
- Expansion and Shrinking
-
Tag Management
- Adding a Tag to a Shared File System
- Deleting a Tag from a Shared File System
- Querying Tags of a Shared File System
- Querying Tags of All File Systems of a Tenant
- Batch Adding Tags to a Shared File System
- Batch Deleting Tags from a Shared File System
- Querying Shared File Systems by Tag
- Querying the Number of Shared File Systems by Tag
- AZ
-
SFS Turbo APIs
- Lifecycle Management
- Connection Management
- Tag Management
- Name Management
- File System Management
-
Storage Interworking Management
- Adding a Backend Target
- Querying Backend Targets
- Obtaining Details About a Backend Target
- Deleting a Backend Target
- Updating the Properties of a Storage Backend
- Updating the Auto Synchronization Policy of a Storage Backend
- Creating an Import or Export Task
- Querying Details About an Import or Export Task
- Listing Import and Export Tasks
- Deleting an Import or Export Task
- Updating a File System
- Directory Management
-
Permissions Management
- Creating a Permission Rule
- Querying Permission Rules of a File System
- Querying a Permission Rule of a File System
- Modifying a Permission Rule
- Deleting a Permissions Rule
- Creating and Binding the LDAP Configuration
- Querying the LDAP Configuration
- Modifying the LDAP Configuration
- Deleting the LDAP Configuration
- Task Management
- General Purpose File System APIs
- Permissions Policies and Supported Actions
- Common Parameters
- Appendix
- SDK Reference
-
Troubleshooting
- Mounting a File System Times Out
- Mounting a File System Fails
- File System Performance Is Poor
- Failed to Create an SFS Turbo File System
- A File System Is Automatically Disconnected from the Server
- A Server Fails to Access a File System
- The File System Is Abnormal
- Data Fails to Be Written into a File System Mounted to ECSs Running Different Types of Operating Systems
- Failed to Mount an NFS File System to a Windows IIS Server
- Writing to a File System Fails
- Error Message "wrong fs type, bad option" Is Displayed During File System Mounting
- Failed to Access the Shared Folder in Windows
-
FAQs
- Concepts
- Specifications
- Restrictions
- Networks
-
Billing
- How Do I Purchase SFS?
- How Do I Renew the Service?
- How Do I Check Whether the Subscriber Is in Arrears?
- Can I Purchase SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Packages When I Still Have Valid Ones in Use?
- How Do I Check the Usage of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- How Do I Adjust the Size of an SFS Capacity-Oriented Resource Package?
- Do SFS Capacity-Oriented and SFS Turbo Share One Resource Package?
-
Others
- How Do I Access a File System from a Server?
- How Do I Check Whether a File System on a Linux Server Is Available?
- What Resources Does SFS Occupy?
- Why Is the Capacity Displayed as 10P After I Mount My SFS Capacity-Oriented File System?
- Why the Capacity Is Displayed as 250TB After I Mount My General Purpose File System?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and OBS?
- Can a File System Be Accessed Across Multiple AZs?
- Can I Upgrade an SFS Capacity-Oriented File System to an SFS Turbo File System?
- Can I Upgrade an SFS Turbo File System from Standard to Standard-Enhanced?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and EVS?
- Can I Directly Access SFS from On-premises Devices?
- How Do I Delete .nfs Files?
- Why My File System Used Space Increases After I Migrate from SFS Capacity-Oriented to SFS Turbo?
- How Can I Improve the Copy and Delete Efficiency with an SFS Turbo File System?
- How Do Second- and Third-level Directory Permissions of an SFS Turbo File System Be Inherited?
- How Do I Deploy SFS Turbo on CCE?
- Videos
-
More Documents
- User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- API Reference (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
-
User Guide (Paris Region)
- Introduction
- Getting Started
- Management
- Typical Applications
-
Troubleshooting
- Mounting a File System Times Out
- Mounting a File System Fails
- Failed to Create an SFS Turbo File System
- A File System Is Automatically Disconnected from the Server
- A Server Fails to Access a File System
- The File System Is Abnormal
- Data Fails to Be Written into a File System Mounted to ECSs Running Different Types of Operating Systems
- Failed to Mount an NFS File System to a Windows IIS Server
- Writing to a File System Fails
- Error Message "wrong fs type, bad option" Is Displayed During File System Mounting
- Failed to Access the Shared Folder in Windows
-
FAQs
- Concepts
- Specifications
- Restrictions
- Networks
-
Others
- How Do I Access a File System from a Server?
- How Do I Check Whether a File System on a Linux Server Is Available?
- What Resources Does SFS Occupy?
- Why Is the Capacity Displayed as 10P After I Mount My SFS Capacity-Oriented File System?
- Can a File System Be Accessed Across Multiple AZs?
- How Can I Migrate Data Between SFS and EVS?
- Can I Directly Access SFS from On-premises Devices?
- How Do I Delete .nfs Files?
- Why My File System Used Space Increases After I Migrate from SFS Capacity-Oriented to SFS Turbo?
- How Can I Improve the Copy and Delete Efficiency with an SFS Turbo File System?
- How Do Second- and Third-level Directory Permissions of an SFS Turbo File System Be Inherited?
- Other Operations
- Change History
- API Reference (Paris Region)
- User Guide (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- API Reference (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- Glossary
- General Reference
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Mounting an NFS File System to ECSs (Windows)
After creating a file system, you need to mount the file system to servers so that they can share the file system.
This section uses Windows Server 2012 as the example OS to describe how to mount an NFS file system. For other versions, perform the steps based on the actual situation.
An SFS Capacity-Oriented file system can support either the NFS or CIFS protocol.
In this section, ECSs are used as example servers. Operations on BMSs and containers (CCE) are the same as those on ECSs.
Prerequisites
- You have created a file system and have obtained the mount point of the file system.
- At least one ECS that belongs to the same VPC as the file system exists.
- The IP address of the DNS server for resolving the domain names of the file systems has been configured on the ECS. For details, see Configuring DNS.
Limitations and Constraints
You are advised to use CIFS file systems in Windows OS.
SFS Turbo file systems cannot be mounted to Windows ECSs.
Procedure
- Go to the ECS console and log in to the ECS running Windows Server 2012.
- Install the NFS client.
- Click Server Manager in the lower left corner. The Server Manager window is displayed, as shown in Figure 1.
- Click Add Roles and Features. See Figure 2.
- Click Next as prompted. On the Server Roles page, select Server for NFS, as shown in Figure 3.
- Click Next. In the Features page, select Client for NFS and click Next, as shown in Figure 4. Confirm the settings and then click Install. If you install the NFS client for the first time, after the installation is complete, restart the client and log in to the ECS again as prompted.
- Modify the NFS transfer protocol.
- Check that the IP address of the DNS server for resolving the domain names of the file systems has been configured on the ECS before mounting the file system. For details, see Configuring DNS. SFS Turbo file systems do not require domain name resolution.
- Run the following command in the Command Prompt of the Windows Server 2012 (X is the drive letter of the free disk). Select the ECS that belongs to the same VPC as the file system to mount the file system.
mount -o nolock mount point X:
NOTE:
- Free drive letter of the disk: A drive letter that is not in use, such as drive letter E or X.
You can move the cursor to the mount point and click
next to the mount point to copy the mount point. If the information shown in Figure 8 is displayed, the mounting is successful.
- After the file system is mounted successfully, you can view the mounted file system on the This PC window, as shown in Figure 9.
If the mounting fails or times out, rectify the fault by referring to Troubleshooting.
NOTE:
To distinguish different file systems mounted on an ECS, you can rename file systems by right-clicking a file system and choose Rename.
Troubleshooting
If a file system is mounted to a Linux ECS and a Windows ECS, on the Windows ECS, data cannot be written to the files created by the Linux ECS. To address this problem, modify the registry and change both UID and GID values to 0 for NFS accesses from Windows. This section uses Windows Server 2012 as an example. Do as follows:
- Choose Start > Run and enter regedit to open the registry.
- Enter the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\ClientForNFS\CurrentVersion\Default directory. See Figure 10.
- Right-click the blank area and choose New > DWORD Value from the shortcut menu. Set AnonymousUid and AnonymousGid to 0. Figure 11 shows a successful operation.
- After modifying the registry, restart the server for the modification to take effect.
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