![]() Unmounting a Remote DVD-ROM Drive for Linux Unmounting a Remote DVD-ROM Drive for Solaris Unmounting a Local DVD-ROM Drive for Solaris and Linux Steps to Perform on the Local System for Solaris and Linux Steps to Perform on the Remote System for Linux Steps to Perform on the Remote System for Solaris Mounting an Network File System-Exported DVD-ROM Drive Mounting and Unmounting the DVD-ROM Drive on Solaris/Linux Posted on by Creature Posted in Networking Adminstration, Tech Tagged Apple, Directory Services, LDAP, OS X.Mounting and Unmounting the DVD-ROM Drive on Solaris/Linux Table Of Contents Sudo /System/Library/CoreServices/ManagedClient.app/Contents/Resources/createmobileaccount -n USER -X -s -v -u nfs://SERVER/EXPORT_PATH ![]() Now my call to createmobileaccount looks like Also, I used the -u option to calling createmobileaccount. Based on this post, I added OriginalHomeDirectory in my LDAP mappings to the homeDirectory attribute in my directory. I think that it tried to sync, but was failing almost immediately. I got a number of “home path is nil” errors in my FileSync log. It wouldn’t even try to sync from my network home. I would just get the standard skeleton account for a new user even though I was able to log in through my network credentials. Second, I wasn’t getting syncing when I created my mobile account. In my new mapping, I mapped GeneratedUID to the uidNumber attribute in my directory. Turns out there is a LDAP attribute that was missing for Mountain Lion. If I tried to open the page, system preferences would just crash. ![]() First, for my LDAP accounts, I was not able to access the Users & Groups pane from the system preferences. Not without a couple of errors here and there. I loaded the template from the previous post, and I had my network accounts coming across from the filer, so those were all ready to go right away. First, since I’ve moved most of my information to the network, this was less painful that it could have been. The post has a section at the end for putting multiple boot images on a single disk.Ĭouple of things that I noticed. I generated a USB install drive on one partition for Mountain Lion following this writeup, and leaving the rest open for future versions if necessary. I went with the clean install since I’m not sure why things are not running properly. I’ve got my copy of 10.8 Mountain Lion to install. Well, my laptop had been acting up, and I’ve decided to clean install everything. Continue reading “The fall of Apple and my iPhone SE” → Posted on DecemDecemby Creature Posted in Tech Tagged Apple, iOS, iPhone, Mac, OS X. I’ve still got the machine and still use it. It really changed the way that I thought about Apple. It was great, the iPhone was great, they worked great together. Additionally, it came with support for other technologies like LDAP support. It had all of the things that make the experience better underneath while still looking like the previous generation. The MacBook even came with a new nVidia graphics card that could be used for accelerating compute for things like image processing. ![]() OS X Snow Leopard had just come out with a rewritten kernel and a bunch of other improvements like smaller memory footprint and support for 64-bit processors and OpenCL which allows use of the GPUs for augmenting the processor. At the time I was impressed by what a great computer it was. I already had an iPhone which I had received as a gift and I really loved it, but I hadn’t had a Mac before. When I got back home, I got myself a 15” MacBook Pro. I was flying back to Austin from the Bay Area and it just never came out the other side of the metal detector. Back in 2009, my IBM Thinkpad laptop was stolen from me while going through security at the Oakland Airport.
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