Drives Like Crazy: For a racer who learned to drive briskly on the French country roads, as his forte in drifting shows.Combat Pragmatist: His bio describes him as "not adverse to the odd dirty trick to get ahead.".Color Motif: As per Noise Bomb, Mark sports a green and black racing suit, matching with his M3 painted in a green livery.He is one of the Drift Kings who drives a green multi-striped E46 BMW M3. Token Minority: He is the only black driver among the Race Kings.Ĭar: BMW M3 (E46) Affiliation: Noise Bomb#7 of the Race Kings.Aya's bio, however, nonetheless states that "Cruz's mysterious ways and dangerous driving holds her in thrall." Though his bio stated that he hangs out with Aya Vasquez, it is unknown whether Rod has a romantic interest for her, with his bio stating that "racing remains his first love", plus Montana's bio claims that the two of them like to party with the pit girls. Thousand-Yard Stare: His bio actually name-drops this while describing him, as it says that "a complex character hides behind his 1000-yard stare." He does certainly have a pretty intense gaze in his intro ◊.The Rival: Rod and Nate Denver are implied to be this to each other, as Rod's bio states states that "there's no love lost" between them.Leitmotif: His theme is The Nextmen's remixed version of "Insight" by Fort Knox 5 feat.His bio states that he's a mechanic, which is also described as being his gift, as "he always gets more from his engine". The Casanova: Aside from the whole in-universe Ship Tease with Aya Vasquez, Diablo Montana's intro claims that Rod and Diablo like to party with the Pit Girls.He is one of the Speed Kings who drives a blue Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X. It really is that simple, but it took me quite a while, and some suggestions from people on IRC to figure it out, because searching the web for “NFS behind NAT” really didn’t produce any sensible results.–- Opening narration#10 of the Race Kings. To get this done, I simply had to open the “Go to Folder” dialog (Command+Shift+G) and enter the mount point: “/Volumes/jabo”. Of course I wanted it to show up in Finder too, as it would when using the “Connect to Server” dialog. On /Volumes/jabo (nodev, nosuid, mounted by dawuss) You can confirm this using the mount command: mango:~/Downloads/Disk Images dawuss$ mountĪutomount -nsl on /Network (automounted)Īutomount -fstab on /automount/Servers (automounted)Īutomount -static on /automount/static (automounted) However, nothing stops us from using the command line, so it was just a matter of opening my favorite terminal program (iTerm) and entering: mango:~ dawuss$ mkdir /Volumes/jaboĭ:/home/jabo /Volumes/jabo/Īssuming you already set up your NFS server to work using unprivileged ports, this will set up the NFS connection as usual, only now using TCP as transport protocol instead of UDP. The GUI connects using UDP, so it doesn’t work. The solution is simple: use TCP for the NFS connection. Of course, thinking about it, this made perfectly sense: UDP connections are stateless, and therefore cannot be masqueraded properly (there is no way of knowing where a UDP packet is supposed to go when it arrives at the router). A look at system.log confirmed this: Sep 11 15:32:47 mango kernel: So the problem had to be on the client side. The log file on the server side would say everything is OK: Sep 11 15:25:22 persephone rpc.mountd: authenticated mount requestįrom :57945 for /home/jabo (/home/jabo) While trying to mount the directory “/home/jabo” from my server on my Mac, the mounting would appear to succeed, but it would never get accessible, and eventually I would just get the “Server connection interrupted”” message from the Finder. I had been having problems getting my NFS volumes mounted when I was connected to a network behind a masquerading NAT router. Sometimes solutions are so easy, you just overlook them. 11 September, 2005 NFS behind NAT on Mac OS X
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