Is there a special deal with NFS and mountable filesystems (like a cdrom or internal zip drive)? I have NFS working fine with all my /home/* directories. My UIDs and GIDs are okay. Permissions seem to be set fine. But, when I ssh into my server and mount (for example) my internal zip250, I can't (from my desktop) mount that zip250 as an nfs filesystem. It denies and gives permissions as the reason (but, like I said, it seems to me that all is well with IDs and chmod type permissions). Or, it could be that I'm just stupid (and feel free to say so). Should I basically use NFS for /home directories or other filesystems that mount a boot time, leaving the mountable stuff (like my cdrom and zip250) accessible via ssh or vnc? just use ssh or vnc to copy or move files to whichever home dir I needed to? I still learning NFS, so I'm not really with-it in regards to concepts and how stuff should be handled. How to actually mount the dang drives with NFS has me kinda confused, too. I can ssh into the server and mount. Anyone else on the LAN? No. How do I treat these mountable filesystems to share them over a LAN? I appreciate the help, if you have any. -Greg -- Mutt 1.4i on Red Hat 8.0 Linux Curridabat, San Jose, Costa Rica http://www.greg-and-sue.com/screenshot.jpg Yahoo Instant Messenger ID: gregkedro