In the past I used to run VMWare ESXi and hosted everything in their own virtual machine for better isolation and performance although since then, I had tested and was extremely happy with the performance of running virtual machines on top of Hyper-V and Windows Server so when I re-built my home server several months ago I decided to go down that route instead.Īnyway, enough of all that, let me explain why I have such a need for this kind of set-up… A MineCraft server running Ubuntu Server 16.04 LTS – Used by my daughter and friend to play online together.
#Mac nfs access denied code
A Jenkins server running Ubuntu Server 16.04 LTS – Used for automated code testing and continuous integration.An OpenVPN server running CentOS 7 – Providing secure VPN tunnel access for me when away from home.A Web Server and reverse proxy running Ubuntu Server 16.04 LTS – Hosting Gogs, Minio and various Nginx reverse proxy configurations for sites, services and API’s that sit on other VM’s in my network.I currently have the following virtual machines setup and running on it (under Hyper-V):
#Mac nfs access denied software
In my home network I have a single (in an attempt to be eco-friendly) Intel i7 server running Windows Server 2016 Standard edition, I use this server for hosting my family media, files and various database engines and ActiveDirectory for local development (I’m a software engineer by trade!) in addition to several Hyper-V virtual machines that do various tasks, all of the virtual machines are running a derivative of Linux.
In this post I will explain how you can configure an NFS Server on a Windows 2016 Server and connect/mount the NFS exports on Linux clients, in my case I wanted to run a Linux virtual machine whist ensuring that the actual data resides on physical disks on my host machine ensuring that the data is automatically part of my nightly backup routine and did not need to run separate backup scripts on the VM(s).