After you set up and configure NSS volumes, you can mount and dismount volumes to make them available to users and APIs. After you mount a volume, it is only available to APIs until you activate it. Dismounting a volume makes it unavailable to users and to APIs.
Before you can dismount an NSS volume on Linux, you must dismount the volume from NCP Server; otherwise, the dismount function fails.
At the server prompt, open the NCP Console by entering
ncpcon
Dismount the volume from NCP.
The volume is no longer accessible or visible to NCP clients.
In iManager, click
.For instructions, see Section 9.1.3, Accessing Roles and Tasks in iManager.
Select a server to manage.
For instructions, see Section 9.1.4, Selecting a Server to Manage.
In the
list, select one or more volumes that you want to mount or dismount.Click
or .After the page refreshes, you can see that the volume’s state changed. If a selected volume is already in the specified state, no change occurs. The details of dismounted volumes are not available.
For NSS volumes on Linux, you can mount the volume only from NSSMU the first time it is started after a reboot. NSSMU allows you to mount only one volume at a time so that you can enter its password.
In NSSMU, select
.In the
list, select the encrypted volume that you want to mount.Press
to mount the volume.If you are prompted to enter the password, enter the password, then click
.You are prompted for the password on the first time the volume is mounted after a system reboot.
For NSS volumes on Linux, you can mount the volume only from NSSMU the first time it is started after a reboot.
In NSSMU, select
.In the
list, select the encrypted volume that you want to mount.Press
to dismount the mounted volume.