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The mount point is where in Linux your mounting the efs into.
Create a folder on root.
sudo mkdir /efs
Then run your mount command again but change it to /efs at the end instead of efs
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Hello Ryder,
you are missing "/" in the beginning of the mount point. what you were doing was
sudo mount -t ofs -o tls fs-040ab91881f87e80b:/ home/ec2-user/efs
Instead you needs to use:
sudo mount -t ofs -o tls fs-040ab91881f87e80b:/ /home/ec2-user/efs
Hope this helps.
beantwortet vor 4 Monaten
Hey Sheelnidhi, I am helping Ryder and I have said the exacat same. Its not for me. The / is missing from the mount point 100%
Corrected !
Thanks Sheelnidhi
I just tried using the "/" characters in the beginning and it did not work. I checked in my EC2 and EFS consoles and verified there is NO EFS instance attached to my EC2 instance
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Hi Gary. Thanks for helping. I did create a folder in the CLI before attempting to mount and still got the same error.
Hey Ryder, You have to specify exactly where the folder is. Have you used the full path?
Hi Gary. I have included the full path of where my EFS folder resides where I want to create the mount and I get the same error saying the mount point does not exist. See attached screenshot
Thanks for the screen shot however you haven’t specified the full path. It’s still the relevant path. You are in the ec2-users home directory currently and it’s looking for a directory in there called home.
Please try /home/ec2-user/efs
To confirm you have a efs directory in that location?
Hi Gary,
I verified I am within the following correct directory which is the same one you instructed me to verify: /home/ec2-user/efs
Please see attached screenshot