Mounting File Systems on UNIX-based Instances

On Compute Cloud@Customer, instance users of UNIX based operating systems, such as Linux and Oracle Solaris, can use OS commands to mount and access file systems.

Mount targets serve as network access points for file systems. After your mount target is assigned an IP address, you can use it together with the export path to mount the file system.

On the instance from which you want to mount the file system, you need to install an NFS client package and create a mount point. When you mount the file system, the mount point effectively represents the root directory of the File Storage file system, allowing you to write files to the file system from the instance.

Prerequisites

Note

Only for NFSv4 Mounts in Oracle Linux instances – If you find that the file system owner is assigned as nobody instead of the actual user who mounts the file system, and if you haven't set identity squash, you might need to edit the /etc/idmapd.conf file. In the file, set the DOMAIN entry to either localdomain or to the Active Directory domain name, if applicable. After the change, run service rpcidmapd restart to restart the rpcidmapd service.

Defining settings in the /etc/idmapd.conf file is specific to Oracle Linux, and there are other ways to configure the domain depending on the OS in use. Consult your OS documentation.