Home Forums OS X Server and Client Discussion Questions and Answers No "network" tag available

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  • #355129
    DominikHoffmann
    Participant

    I wroked through Joel Rennich’s article [url=https://www.afp548.com/Articles/Jaguar/networkhome.html]Setting up Network Home Folders on Mac OS X Server 10.2[/url], but for whatever reason, I don’t have a NetInfo domain with the word “network” in it. This is after following steps 1-3 in said article. Why don’t I, and what can I do differently to remedy this? Will I have to, or can I work with what I’ve got:
    [list:50b09d7d4a]NetInfo/root
    NetInfo/DefaultLocalNode[/list:u:50b09d7d4a]

    Dominik Hoffmann[/list]

    #355139
    Cabbage
    Participant

    I was playing around with NFS and automounts last nite so i figured I’d try the article.

    I have the same domains as you

    NetInfo/root
    NetInfo/DefaultLocalNode

    –NetInfo/root
    There are about 150 users in this domain

    –NetInfo/DefaultLocalNode
    Has the account I used to setup the server and another administrative account

    I was getting the DNS error that it says in the article but I was able to fix it (i’m not sure how). I am able to login as and have a NHF for a user that is in NetInfo/root. I have another user that is in both domains. The NHF shows up but I can’t write anything to it.

    #355181
    Anonymous
    Participant

    If I’m not mistaken, /NetInfo/root is the network domain. It automatically receives the “network” tag in NetInfo.

    When you configure a share to automount in Workgroup Manager, choose “/NetInfo/root” for the “Mount volume for all users in…” option

    Brandon Houston

    #355187
    Cabbage
    Participant

    I pretty much figured that out but don’t you think it’s kind of confusing. If it’s the network tag [i:6e86da4682]shouldn’t[/i:6e86da4682] it be called network?

    #355308
    Anonymous
    Participant

    The NetInfo database name is the tag name, e.g. network.
    The information contained by a NetInfo database is called a domain. The domain name is a logical name.
    At the top of a NetInfo Manager window you se tag@host to the left and the domain name to the right.
    The domain contained in the network database is the top domain in a two level NetInfo hieracy and therefor called root (/)

    #355311
    Cabbage
    Participant

    Now it makes sense.

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