rwxrwxrwx 1 pwalker standard 21 Mar 15 16:51. ls -laĭrwxrwxrwx 20 pwalker standard 854 Mar 16 07:58. sannfs:/ifs/userhome/pwalker on /u/pwalker type nfs (rw,nosuid,relatime,vers=3,rsize=131072,wsize=524288,namlen=255,soft,proto=tcp,timeo=600,retrans=2,sec=sys,mountaddr=,mountvers=3,mountport=300,mountproto=tcp,local_lock=none,addr=)Īnd here's a snapshot of my user's mounted home directory when I connect to a VM. Here's some of the mount information, in case the root cause has to do with what options were used. * -rw,intr,nosuid,soft,proto=tcp sannfs:/ifs/userhome/& It's a convenient way to keep the VM's storage footprint small while giving users an easy way to transfer files from one Ubuntu VM to another.īelow is the configuration of autofs. We have configured a non-standard home directory on every user's AD profile so that when a user logs in to an Ubuntu VM, the autofs daemon can automatically mount a network drive folder as the user's home direcory. Below is an example of the info AD would return to sssd. They authenticate through an sssd daemon that sends the provided credentials via LDAP to our Active Directory domains.ĪD then returns all of the user information so that sssd can start their session with the appropriate UID, GID, Home directory, and whatnot. The way we have things set up is that a user initiates an RDP session to the VM. So, some context first on how our Ubuntu VMs are configured.
I'm running a number of Ubuntu 20.04 Desktop VMs at work, and each of them is having an issue with only Firefox when a user tries to download a file.