EXPORTS(5) | File Formats Manual | EXPORTS(5) |
exports
— define
remote mount points for NFS mount requests
exports |
The exports
file specifies remote mount
points for the NFS mount protocol per the NFS server specification; see
Network File System Protocol Specification RFC 1094,
Appendix A and NFS: Network File System Version 3
Specification, Appendix I.
Fields are separated by space or tab characters. Lines that begin with a # are considered comments and are ignored.
Each line in the file specifies one or more exported directories, any additional mountable sub-directories within those directories, export flags, and one or more hosts (if access to the export is to be restricted). All directories on the line must exist within the same local file system.
Within a file system there may be several exported sub-directories with different export options. However, none of those exported directories may lie within another.
A host may be specified only once for each exported directory and there may be only one default entry for each exported directory that applies to all other hosts. The latter exports the file system to the ``world'' and should be used only when the file system contains public information. Any attempt to export the same directory to a host with different export options will cause the conflicting export entry to be rejected.
The first field(s) of an export entry is a list of directories on
a local file system to export. At least one pathname must be to an exported
directory. Other pathnames may refer to sub-directories of the exported
directory to indicate that hosts are also allowed to explicitly mount those
sub-directories of the exported directory. (Note that the
-alldirs
flag can be used to allow mounting any
sub-directories of the pathnames specified.)
Mount points for a file system may appear on multiple lines, each with different sets of hosts and export options.
The pathnames must not have any symbolic links in them and should not have any "." or ".." components. Single and double quote characters occuring in a pathname must be escaped with \' and \", respectively. Space characters occuring in a pathname must be escaped, or alternatively, the pathname can be enclosed in single or double quotes.
Note that because an export entry only lists a set of pathnames,
it is up to the NFS server to correctly determine what file system is meant
to be exported by that entry. To that end, the server will attempt to
intelligently decide which file system best matches the entry by comparing
all the pathnames with both the current list of mounted file systems and the
list of previously-exported file systems. If the server determines that the
intended file system is not available, it will automatically mark that
export as offline until the file system becomes available (see the
-offline
export option below for more info). To
avoid any ambiguity, use of the -fs
export option is
recommended (see below).
The second component of a line specifies how the file system is to be exported to the host set. The option flags specify whether the file system is exported read-only or read-write and how the client uid is mapped to user credentials on the server.
Export options are specified as follows:
-maproot
=user
The credential of the specified user is used for remote access by root. The
credential includes all the groups to which the user is a member on the
local machine ( see id(1) ). The user may be specified by
name or number.
-maproot
=user:group1:group2:...
The colon separated list is used to specify the precise credential to be
used for remote access by root. The elements of the list may be either names
or numbers. Note that ``user:'' should be used to distinguish a credential
containing no groups from a complete credential for that user.
-mapall
=user
or
-mapall
=user:group1:group2:...
specifies a mapping for all client uids (including root) using the same
semantics as -maproot
.
The option -r
is a synonym for
-maproot
in an effort to be backward compatible with
older export file formats.
In the absence of -maproot
and
-mapall
options, remote accesses by root will result
in using a credential of -2:-2. All other users will be mapped to their
remote credential. If a -maproot
option is given,
remote access by root will be mapped to that credential instead of -2:-2. If
a -mapall
option is given, all users (including
root) will be mapped to that credential in place of their own.
The -alldirs
flag allows the host(s) to
mount at any point within the file system, including regular files if the
-R
option is used on nfsd.
The -ro
option specifies that the file
system should be exported read-only (default read/write). The option
-o
is a synonym for -ro
in
an effort to be backward compatible with older export file formats.
The -32bitclients
option causes the NFS
server to guarantee that directory cookies will fit within 32 bits even
though directory cookies are 64 bits in NFSv3. This option may be required
with NFS clients that do not properly support 64 bit directory cookies. Use
of this option may result in sub-optimal performance of the exported file
system.
The -manglednames
option causes the NFS
server to guarantee that filenames will fit into 255 bytes. For NFSv2 this
is always the case. For NFSv3 specifying this option on an export will cause
filenames greater than 255 characters from that export be mangled in such a
way that when the client presents a received mangled name it will refer to
the same name as the original name on the server.
-sec
=mechanism1:mechanism2...
This option specifies one or more security mechanisms required for access to
the exported directory. The security mechanisms currently supported are
krb5p, krb5i, krb5, and sys. Multiple security mechanisms can be specified
as a colon separated list, and should be in the order of most preferred to
least preferred. In the absence of this option, the security mechanism
defaults to sys.
-offline
This option specifies that the
given export should be treated as if the exported file system is not
available. For NFSv3, this will cause clients to receive "jukebox"
errors directing them to try the request later. For NFSv2 (which does not
support this error value), the export will be treated as non-existent and
clients will receive stale file handle errors.
-fspath
=/path
and/or
-fsuuid
=UUID
These options can be used to specify the pathname to and/or the UUID of the
file system that is intended to be exported. This can be useful to
disambiguate the export entry. Since the export syntax only specifies the
path to the directory to be exported, it can be ambiguous as to what file
system is expected to be exported. Specifying "/Volumes/XRAID" can
be interpreted as exporting either a file system mounted on that directory
or the "Volumes/XRAID" subdirectory of the root file system.
Specifying
-fspath
=/Volumes/XRAID
can prevent exporting the wrong file system - for example, if the exports
are evaluated at a point when the directory exists but the volume has not
yet been mounted on it. The export will fail if the file system referred to
in an export entry either (1) is not mounted at the same path as the given
-fspath
=/path.
or (2) does not have a UUID that matches the given
-fsuuid
=UUID.
The third component of a line specifies the host set to which the line applies. The set may be specified in three ways. The first way is to list the host name(s) separated by white space. (Standard internet IPv4 ``dot'' addresses or IPv6 colon addresses may be used in place of names.) The second way is to specify a ``netgroup'' as defined in the netgroup file (see netgroup(5) ). The third way is to specify an internet sub-network using a network and network mask that is defined as the set of all hosts with addresses within the sub-network. This latter approach requires less overhead within the kernel and is recommended for cases where the export line refers to a large number of clients within an administrative sub-net.
The first two cases are specified by simply listing
the name(s) separated by whitespace. All names are checked to see if they
are ``netgroup'' names first and are assumed to be hostnames otherwise.
Using the full domain specification for a hostname can normally circumvent
the problem of a host that has the same name as a netgroup. The third case
is specified by the flag
-network
=netname
and optionally
-mask
=netmask.
If the mask is not specified, it will default to the mask for that network
class (A, B or C; see inet(5) ).
/usr /usr/local -maproot=0:10 friends /usr -maproot=daemon grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca 131.104.48.16 /usr -ro -mapall=nobody /u -maproot=bin: -network 131.104.48 -mask 255.255.255.0 /u1 -alldirs -network 2001:DB8:: -mask ffff:ffff:: /u2 -maproot=root friends /u2 -alldirs -network cis-net -mask cis-mask /Users -alldirs -network 2.29.96.0 -mask 255.255.255.0 /Applications -ro -network 2.29.96.0 -mask 255.255.255.0
Given that /usr, /u, /u1, /u2, and / are local file system mount points, the above example specifies the following:
/usr is exported to hosts friends, where friends is specified in the netgroup file with users mapped to their remote credentials and root mapped to uid 0 and group 10. It is exported read-write and the hosts in friends can mount either /usr or /usr/local. It is exported to 131.104.48.16 and grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca with users mapped to their remote credentials and root mapped to the user and groups associated with ``daemon''; it is exported to the rest of the world as read-only with all users mapped to the user and groups associated with ``nobody''.
/u is exported to all hosts on the sub-network 131.104.48 with root mapped to the uid for ``bin'' and with no group access.
/u1 is exported to all hosts on the IPv6 sub-network 2001:DB8::
/u2 is exported to the hosts in ``friends'' with root mapped to uid and groups associated with ``root''; it is exported to all hosts on network ``cis-net'' allowing mounts at any directory within /u2.
The /Users and /Applications sub-directories of / are exported to all hosts on the sub-network 2.29.96. Any directory within /Users can be mounted. /Users is exported read-write and /Applications is exported read-only.
It is recommended that all exported directories within the same server file system be specified on adjacent lines going down the tree. You cannot specify a hostname that is also the name of a netgroup. Specifying the full domain specification for a hostname can normally circumvent the problem.
October 25, 2006 | Mac OS X 12 |