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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-15 19:43:11 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-15 19:43:11 +0000 |
commit | fc22b3d6507c6745911b9dfcc68f1e665ae13dbc (patch) | |
tree | ce1e3bce06471410239a6f41282e328770aa404a /upstream/fedora-rawhide/man8/mountd.8 | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | manpages-l10n-fc22b3d6507c6745911b9dfcc68f1e665ae13dbc.tar.xz manpages-l10n-fc22b3d6507c6745911b9dfcc68f1e665ae13dbc.zip |
Adding upstream version 4.22.0.upstream/4.22.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'upstream/fedora-rawhide/man8/mountd.8')
-rw-r--r-- | upstream/fedora-rawhide/man8/mountd.8 | 332 |
1 files changed, 332 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/upstream/fedora-rawhide/man8/mountd.8 b/upstream/fedora-rawhide/man8/mountd.8 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c85c5d61 --- /dev/null +++ b/upstream/fedora-rawhide/man8/mountd.8 @@ -0,0 +1,332 @@ +.\"@(#)rpc.mountd.8" +.\" +.\" Copyright (C) 1999 Olaf Kirch <okir@monad.swb.de> +.\" Modified by Paul Clements, 2004. +.\" +.TH rpc.mountd 8 "31 Dec 2009" +.SH NAME +rpc.mountd \- NFS mount daemon +.SH SYNOPSIS +.BI "/usr/sbin/rpc.mountd [" options "]" +.SH DESCRIPTION +The +.B rpc.mountd +daemon implements the server side of the NFS MOUNT protocol, +an NFS side protocol used by NFS version 2 [RFC1094] and NFS version 3 [RFC1813]. +It also responds to requests from the Linux kernel to authenticate +clients and provides details of access permissions. +.PP +The NFS server +.RI ( nfsd ) +maintains a cache of authentication and authorization information which +is used to identify the source of each request, and then what access +permissions that source has to any local filesystem. When required +information is not found in the cache, the server sends a request to +.B mountd +to fill in the missing information. Mountd uses a table of information +stored in +.B /var/lib/nfs/etab +and maintained by +.BR exportfs (8), +possibly based on the contents of +.BR exports (5), +to respond to each request. +.SS Mounting exported NFS File Systems +The NFS MOUNT protocol has several procedures. +The most important of these are +MNT (mount an export) and +UMNT (unmount an export). +.PP +A MNT request has two arguments: an explicit argument that +contains the pathname of the root directory of the export to be mounted, +and an implicit argument that is the sender's IP address. +.PP +When receiving a MNT request from an NFS client, +.B rpc.mountd +checks both the pathname and the sender's IP address against its export table. +If the sender is permitted to access the requested export, +.B rpc.mountd +returns an NFS file handle for the export's root directory to the client. +The client can then use the root file handle and NFS LOOKUP requests +to navigate the directory structure of the export. +.SS The rmtab File +The +.B rpc.mountd +daemon registers every successful MNT request by adding an entry to the +.I /var/lib/nfs/rmtab +file. +When receivng a UMNT request from an NFS client, +.B rpc.mountd +simply removes the matching entry from +.IR /var/lib/nfs/rmtab , +as long as the access control list for that export allows that sender +to access the export. +.PP +Clients can discover the list of file systems an NFS server is +currently exporting, or the list of other clients that have mounted +its exports, by using the +.BR showmount (8) +command. +.BR showmount (8) +uses other procedures in the NFS MOUNT protocol to report information +about the server's exported file systems. +.PP +Note, however, that there is little to guarantee that the contents of +.I /var/lib/nfs/rmtab +are accurate. +A client may continue accessing an export even after invoking UMNT. +If the client reboots without sending a UMNT request, stale entries +remain for that client in +.IR /var/lib/nfs/rmtab . +.SS Mounting File Systems with NFSv4 +Version 4 (and later) of NFS does not use a separate NFS MOUNT +protocol. Instead mounting is performed using regular NFS requests +handled by the NFS server in the Linux kernel +.RI ( nfsd ). +Consequently +.I /var/lib/nfs/rmtab +is not updated to reflect any NFSv4 activity. +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.B \-d kind " or " \-\-debug kind +Turn on debugging. Valid kinds are: all, auth, call, general and parse. +.TP +.BR \-l " or " \-\-log\-auth +Enable logging of responses to authentication and access requests from +nfsd. Each response is then cached by the kernel for 30 minutes (or as set by +.B \-\-ttl +below), and will be refreshed after 15 minutes (half the ttl time) if +the relevant client remains active. +Note that +.B -l +is equivalent to +.B "-d auth" +and so can be enabled in +.B /etc/nfs.conf +with +.B "\[dq]debug = auth\[dq]" +in the +.B "[mountd]" +section. +.IP +.B rpc.mountd +will always log authentication responses to MOUNT requests when NFSv3 is +used, but to get similar logs for NFSv4, this option is required. +.TP +.BR \-i " or " \-\-cache\-use\-ipaddr +Normally each client IP address is matched against each host identifier +(name, wildcard, netgroup etc) found in +.B /etc/exports +and a combined identity is formed from all matching identifiers. +Often many clients will map to the same combined identity so performing +this mapping reduces the number of distinct access details that the +kernel needs to store. +Specifying the +.B \-i +option suppresses this mapping so that access to each filesystem is +requested and cached separately for each client IP address. Doing this +can increase the burden of updating the cache slightly, but can make the +log messages produced by the +.B -l +option easier to read. +.TP +.B \-T " or " \-\-ttl +Provide a time-to-live (TTL) for cached information given to the kernel. +The kernel will normally request an update if the information is needed +after half of this time has expired. Increasing the provided number, +which is in seconds, reduces the rate of cache update requests, and this +is particularly noticeable when these requests are logged with +.BR \-l . +However increasing also means that changes to hostname to address +mappings can take longer to be noticed. +The default TTL is 1800 (30 minutes). +.TP +.B \-F " or " \-\-foreground +Run in foreground (do not daemonize) +.TP +.B \-h " or " \-\-help +Display usage message. +.TP +.B \-o num " or " \-\-descriptors num +Set the limit of the number of open file descriptors to num. The +default is to leave the limit unchanged. +.TP +.B \-N mountd-version " or " \-\-no-nfs-version mountd-version +This option can be used to request that +.B rpc.mountd +do not offer certain versions of NFS. The current version of +.B rpc.mountd +can support both NFS version 2, 3 and 4. If the +either one of these version should not be offered, +.B rpc.mountd +must be invoked with the option +.B "\-\-no-nfs-version <vers>" . +.TP +.B \-n " or " \-\-no-tcp +Don't advertise TCP for mount. +.TP +.B \-p num " or " \-P num " or " \-\-port num +Specifies the port number used for RPC listener sockets. +If this option is not specified, +.B rpc.mountd +will try to consult +.IR /etc/services , +if gets port succeed, set the same port for all listener socket, +otherwise chooses a random ephemeral port for each listener socket. +.IP +This option can be used to fix the port value of +.BR rpc.mountd 's +listeners when NFS MOUNT requests must traverse a firewall +between clients and servers. +.TP +.B \-H " prog or " \-\-ha-callout prog +Specify a high availability callout program. +This program receives callouts for all MOUNT and UNMOUNT requests. +This allows +.B rpc.mountd +to be used in a High Availability NFS (HA-NFS) environment. +.IP +The callout program is run with 4 arguments. +The first is +.B mount +or +.B unmount +depending on the reason for the callout. +The second will be the name of the client performing the mount. +The third will be the path that the client is mounting. +The last is the number of concurrent mounts that we believe the client +has of that path. +.IP +This callout is not needed with 2.6 and later kernels. +Instead, mount the nfsd filesystem on +.IR /proc/fs/nfsd . +.TP +.BI "\-s," "" " \-\-state\-directory\-path " directory +Specify a directory in which to place state information (etab and rmtab). +If this option is not specified the default of +.I /var/lib/nfs +is used. +.TP +.BI "\-r," "" " \-\-reverse\-lookup" +.B rpc.mountd +tracks IP addresses in the +.I rmtab +file. When a DUMP request is made (by +someone running +.BR "showmount -a" , +for instance), it returns IP addresses instead +of hostnames by default. This option causes +.B rpc.mountd +to perform a reverse lookup on each IP address and return that hostname instead. +Enabling this can have a substantial negative effect on performance +in some situations. +.TP +.BR "\-t N" " or " "\-\-num\-threads=N " or " \-\-num\-threads N " +This option specifies the number of worker threads that rpc.mountd +spawns. The default is 1 thread, which is probably enough. More +threads are usually only needed for NFS servers which need to handle +mount storms of hundreds of NFS mounts in a few seconds, or when +your DNS server is slow or unreliable. +.TP +.B \-u " or " \-\-no-udp +Don't advertise UDP for mounting +.TP +.B \-V version " or " \-\-nfs-version version +This option can be used to request that +.B rpc.mountd +offer certain versions of NFS. The current version of +.B rpc.mountd +can support both NFS version 2 and the newer version 3. +.TP +.B \-v " or " \-\-version +Print the version of +.B rpc.mountd +and exit. +.TP +.B \-g " or " \-\-manage-gids +Accept requests from the kernel to map user id numbers into lists of +group id numbers for use in access control. An NFS request will +normally (except when using Kerberos or other cryptographic +authentication) contains a user-id and a list of group-ids. Due to a +limitation in the NFS protocol, at most 16 groups ids can be listed. +If you use the +.B \-g +flag, then the list of group ids received from the client will be +replaced by a list of group ids determined by an appropriate lookup on +the server. Note that the 'primary' group id is not affected so a +.B newgroup +command on the client will still be effective. This function requires +a Linux Kernel with version at least 2.6.21. + +.SH CONFIGURATION FILE +Many of the options that can be set on the command line can also be +controlled through values set in the +.B [mountd] +or, in some cases, the +.B [nfsd] +sections of the +.I /etc/nfs.conf +configuration file. +Values recognized in the +.B [mountd] +section include +.BR manage-gids , +.BR cache\-use\-ipaddr , +.BR descriptors , +.BR port , +.BR threads , +.BR ttl , +.BR reverse-lookup ", and" +.BR state-directory-path , +.B ha-callout +which each have the same effect as the option with the same name. + +The values recognized in the +.B [nfsd] +section include +.BR TCP , +.BR UDP , +.BR vers3 ", and" +.B vers4 +which each have the same meaning as given by +.BR rpc.nfsd (8). + +.SH IPv6 and TI-RPC support +TI-RPC is a pre-requisite for supporting NFS on IPv6. +If TI-RPC support is built into +.BR rpc.mountd , +it attempts to start listeners on network transports marked 'visible' in +.IR /etc/netconfig . +As long as at least one network transport listener starts successfully, +.B rpc.mountd +will operate. +.SH FILES +.TP 2.5i +.I /etc/exports +input file for +.BR exportfs , +listing exports, export options, and access control lists +.TP 2.5i +.I /var/lib/nfs/rmtab +table of clients accessing server's exports +.SH SEE ALSO +.BR exportfs (8), +.BR exports (5), +.BR showmount (8), +.BR rpc.nfsd (8), +.BR rpc.rquotad (8), +.BR nfs (5), +.BR nfs.conf (5), +.BR tcpd (8), +.BR iptables (8), +.BR netconfig (5) +.sp +RFC 1094 - "NFS: Network File System Protocol Specification" +.br +RFC 1813 - "NFS Version 3 Protocol Specification" +.br +RFC 7530 - "Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Protocol" +.br +RFC 8881 - "Network File System (NFS) Version 4 Minor Version 1 Protocol" +.SH AUTHOR +Olaf Kirch, H. J. Lu, G. Allan Morris III, and a host of others. |