How Do I Access a File System from a Server?
To access a file system, run the mount command on a Linux server to mount the file system. Then, you can share the files and directories of the file system.
To access your file system, install the NFS client on a Linux server and run the mount command to mount the file system. For a Windows server, install the NFS client, modify the NFS transfer protocol, and run the mount command to mount the file system. Alternatively, directly enter the mount point of the CIFS file system as an authorized user to mount the CIFS file system. Then, you can share the files and directories of the file system.
Others FAQs
- 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?
- 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?
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