This problem seems to be age old...
Due to an unknown network problem I know have my /usr/local
unmountable because it claims it's busy.
I've killed off everything user-wise, there are no processes currently
referencing a file in that directory tree.
It also returns the message that it's a stale NFS mount as well.
An 'ls' of the /usr directory shows no local directory.
Besides rebooting, how do I force the unmounting of the /usr/local directory?
I wish there was an option to force an unmount of any NFS mounted filesystem.
If there are any processes referencing a file in that mount path, then prompt
before killing the process, or better yet, a way to see what in the world is causing
the NFS mount to be "busy".
Thanks,
Received on Mon Apr 19 1999 - 21:51:54 NZST