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Mounting an NFS File System under MS Windows
NT4/2000/XP
Mounting a network drive (NFS File System)
To mount an exported file system as a network drive, perform the following:
- Double-click on My Network Places and then Entire Network.
You should find the XwpNTrdr icon. (May be, you will have to select
Entire contents of the network.)
- Double-click on the XwpNTrdr and then Remote NFS Servers
icons.
As a result, you can see a list of nodes of your local network with
available NFS servers (according to the settings you have made in the NFS
Server tab).
- Select a node you want to connect to by double-clicking on its icon.
Note: with the Ask to connect via SSH-2 check box in the NFS
Servers tab enabled, the Connect Remote Portmapper dialog box will
appear that contains a number of actual SSH2 connections you have previously
established by the SSH2 Client of the Telnet_SSH program (see Starting an
SSH Session in the Starting and Terminating Telnet_SSH section on
how to establish secure connections). The Refresh button allows you
to renovate the list.
The "Dynamic Port Forwarding" feature of the Telnet_SSH/SSH2 Client and
NFS-Client will automatically be used for connections, so you need not set
up any port forwarding manually.

In the Connect Remote Portmapper dialog box, Cancel means not
to use any secure connection channel available. OK with a SSH server
highlighted and the Use SSH Forwarding check box enabled means to
communicate with the NFS server through the secure channel established.
As a result of NFS connection to the node (through either direct insecure or
secure SSH channel), you can see icons with names of exported directories
(if there are any shared NFS resources on that node).
- Select an exported directory and press the right mouse button.
- Select Map Network Drive in the pop-up menu. The Map Network
Drive dialog box of MS Windows will appear:

- Select a drive letter to mount the folder and press Finish.
As a result, you can see the contents of the mounted directory in a separate
window on your desktop (according to your Unix access permissions).
- Then you can do the following operations with the remote NFS resource
mapped to your local drive (according to your Unix access permissions):
- Creating new files and directories
- Deleting files and directories
- Renaming files and directories
- Copying files from remote to local machine and vice versa
- Viewing and editing the contents of files by WordPad, and so on.
Notes
If you use the WEBNFS protocol for mounting a shared directory, the following
examples show alternative ways for mounting a network node with the WEBNFS
protocol:
NET USE Q: \\192.168.0.41\WebNFS
My Computer -> Tools -> Map Network Drive -> Folder=\\192.168.0.41\WebNFS
NFS-Client can use the WEBNFS protocol if NFS servers support the WEBNFS
protocol. When exporting a shared directory on a NFS server, you should specify
the NFS secutity argument as 'none,sys'. The following is a command line example
for OS SUN Solaris 8 :
share -F nfs -o public,sec=none:sys /export/home/nnmdir
Dismounting a network drive (NFS File System)
To dismount an exported file system, perform the following:
- Select My Computer.
- Select a mounted drive you want to dismount and press the right mouse
button.
- In the pop-up menu, select Dismount Network Drive.
Also, you can run the NET USE utility (e.g., for MOUNT and/or MAP). NET USE
connects a computer to a shared resource or disconnects a computer from a shared
resource. When used without options, it lists the computer's connections.
If you enable the Reconnect at logon check box in the Map Network
Drive dialog box on the Tools menu of My Computer or
Explorer, then mounting shared resources and mapping drive letters you
specify will be made every time you log on (i.e. the auto-mounting mode). Mapped
drives are available only when the host computer is also available.