Install AutoFS-support¶
Requirements¶
To install AutoFS you will need the following:- a installed and supported operating system (e.g. CentOS 6.x)
- root-access
- a fast internet connection
Preliminary Note¶
this is based on http://www.olivetalks.com/2008/02/21/automatic-backup-of-windows-computers-using-linux/
Before setting up autofs we need to create a network share on the Windows PC. Remember the user and the password since we’ll need them later on. In this article I’m going to assume the user name is backup and the password is secret but you should use something more difficult to guess depending on your security requirements. I’m also assuming the Windows domain is called company.
Install¶
Install AutoFS by logging into a Terminal as root:
yum install autofs
Setup¶
You need to edit /etc/auto.master
file and add this line
/smb /etc/auto.windows --timeout=60
Then you create the file /etc/auto.windows
containing the following, in a single line:
<share> -fstype=smbfs,credentials=/etc/auto.windows.<credentials pre>,uid=<user>,gid=<group>,fmask=0755,dmask=0755 ://<windows PC>/<network share>
This must be written on a single line, with no separating spaces starting from
-fstype
to dmask=0755
<share>
is the name of directory where you want to mount the network share from Windows PC.
/etc/auto.windows.<credentials pre>
is the name of file where you store the user name and password needed to access the network share on Windows PC. In our case it will look like this:
username = backup
password = secret
domain = company
Test¶
After these preparations it’s time to tell the autofs daemon about these changes by executing service autofs reload
or a corresponding command. You should be able now to see that the network share gets automatically mounted when you execute ls /smb/<share>
. After 60 seconds the share will be unmounted.
Von Jeremias Keihsler vor fast 8 Jahren aktualisiert · 1 Revisionen