systemA mounts a NFS file system located on systemB as follows:
/data on systemB:/data/dbase remote/read/write/setuid/devices/xa11r/dev=4c00003
systeniB mounts an NFS file system located on systemA as follows:
/data on systemA:/data/dbase remote/read/write/setuid/devices/xa11r/dev=4c00003
After a power outage, both systems tried booting at the same time and would not boot up to a
login prompt. Upon further investigation, both systems were stopping at the point where the NFS
mount was trying to be established. Which answer provides a solution to correct this problem?
A.
On systemA, mountthe NFS file system as follows:
mount -o bg systemB: /data/dbase /data and on systemB, mount the NFS file system as follows:
mount —o bg systemA:/data/dbase /data
B.
On systemA, mountthe NFS file system as follows:
mount -o nointr systemB: /data/dbase /data and on systemB, mount the NFS file system as
follows: mount —o nointr systemA:/data/dbase /data
C.
On systemA, mountthe NFS file system as follows:
mount -o sof t systemB: /data/dbase /data and on systemB, mount the NFS file system as follows:
mount —o sof t systemA:/data/dbase /data
D.
On systemA, mountthe NFS file system as follows:
mount -F nfs -o nologging systemB:/data/dbase /data and on systemB, mount the NFS file system
as follows: mount —F nfs —o nologging systemA:/data/dbase /data
Explanation: