Well, yes, actually, but only if you're root and first try the access as
a normal user. This is not a security hole because if the remote file is
owned by root, this wouldn't help you, and if it isn't, there's nobody to
prevent you from locally setuid()ing yourself to the file's owner in the
first place.
The NFS no-root-allowed feature really doesn't prevent accessing files as
root, it just makes root from A and B be a different user.
Unfortunately, Linux itself doesn't know anything about that, hence these
problems.
Effectively, thus, no. ;-)
-- Small Earthquake in Chile; Not Many Killed -- Healing suggested for The Times of London by Claud Cockburn-- Matthias Urlichs