Use .efs file in advanced get?
![use .efs file in advanced get? use .efs file in advanced get?](https://learntap.files.wordpress.com/2020/06/image-114.png)
- #Use .efs file in advanced get? install#
- #Use .efs file in advanced get? password#
- #Use .efs file in advanced get? free#
- #Use .efs file in advanced get? windows#
#Use .efs file in advanced get? free#
If you don't have vim use texteditor of your choice (for example nano /etc/samba/smb.conf) and paste the following boilerplate (feel free to customize it if you need):
#Use .efs file in advanced get? install#
Again, drop the following to your shell for installing SMB services in your ubuntu:Īpt-get install -y samba samba-common python-glade2 system-config-sambaĬp -pf /etc/samba/smb.conf /etc/samba/
#Use .efs file in advanced get? windows#
Now, when we have EFS mounted we want to give our Windows user's access to it's files. Re-exporting NFS share for using in Windows As I said earlier you can drop this boilerplate into User's data section of your EC2 launch, so your instance is going to access this share once ready. Just change your your-efs-fqdn to your output from the AWS -> EFS section. For example for ubuntu just drop the following into your shell:
![use .efs file in advanced get? use .efs file in advanced get?](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/9c/20/20/9c20208957e8b75630038b10a1f48c42.png)
EFS creation takes some time, when done you should be able to see further instructions. For the EFS availability we just need to open up to the world 2049 port (EC2 -> Security Group) and it is pre-defined in the list of protocols (just pick it and define your IP, CIDR or another Security Group). Each AZ points to your security group(s). Withing each region you can either allow or deny access to your share for each availability zone. At the time of writing this post you are looking at 6 regions out of 14. Setting up EFSįirst of all make sure you are in the region, that supports AWS EFS. NB! I do run the below commands as root, so if you are not, prepend sudo where applicable.
![use .efs file in advanced get? use .efs file in advanced get?](https://media.amazonwebservices.com/blog/2016/efs_con_on_prem_dlg_2.png)
What if we can re-export mounted NFS as SMB share and map it to MS Windows of our choice? Let's think wide and try to figure out available options. So if you have either 2012 or 2016 or something else, you are not able to mount your EFS to it. However this is limitation, - MS Windows is not supported. And you can do this to multiple EC2 instances as well (even more - you can add this into Advanced details -> User's data for launching new instances with EFS attached by default for all new instances). This is copy/paste from AWS console with recommendation on mounting file share to Linux instance (of course you need to have NFS client with v4.1 support). If you are not aware of this new service, in short - it is file share that you can mount to your cloud (or even on-prem servers connected to your VPC through Direct Connect service).
#Use .efs file in advanced get? password#
Table of contents postgresql jquery locale issue games cloudfront aws ec2 microsoft free tier iso aws s3 image pbx psexec fail2ban g729 minio jekyll deployment backup ntfs cloudberrylab orchestration macbook html materializecss wysiwyg nokogiri tags acts_as_toggable paperclip swap fix digitalocean asterisk mixmonitor mount bucket administration windows s3 compatible https ec2 nested hyper-v scripts bat certbot capistrano ssl jumpbox meetup debian macos password awsrus certification cloudacademy exchange rails efs static site amazon s3 python amazon sns amazon efs aws ses smtp seo rails console linux mac amazon powershell chrome erudinsky cloud VMware virtualisation blog containers storage google virtualbox ruby cli hyper-v docker Azure DevOps kubernetes CKA CKAD azure Azure Kubernetes Service Azure Container RegistryĮlastic File System ( EFS) from Amazon was introduced at the end of 2016 (at re:Invent 2016) and in fact adds great value to cloud compute services like EC2. Reason I put them here - recall later or help someone else with similar challenge. Most of the posts highlight what I am focused on and express work and personal experience. I am Palo Alto Networks by day and author of this blog by night. ER's cards - DevSecOps and Cloud Native Enthusiast