2 .TH RQUOTAD 8 "25 Aug 2000"
4 rquotad, rpc.rquotad \- remote quota server
6 .B /usr/etc/rpc.rquotad
9 .IX "rquotad daemon" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
10 .IX daemons "rquotad daemon" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
11 .IX "user quotas" "rquotad daemon" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
12 .IX "disk quotas" "rquotad daemon" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
13 .IX "quotas" "rquotad daemon" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
14 .IX "file system" "rquotad daemon" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
15 .IX "remote procedure call services" "rquotad" "" "\fLrquotad\fP \(em remote quota server"
19 server which returns quotas for a user of a local file system
20 which is mounted by a remote machine over the
22 The results are used by
24 to display user quotas for remote file systems.
28 daemon is normally started at boottime from the
30 script (on systems with BSD'ish scripts, e.g. Slackware), or from the
36 (on systems with SysV'ish scripts, e.g. RedHat, SuSE, etc).
38 .SH TCP_WRAPPERS SUPPORT
41 version is protected by the
43 library. You have to give the clients access to
45 if they should be allowed to use it. To allow connects from clients of
46 the .bar.com domain you could use the following line in /etc/hosts.allow:
50 You have to use the daemon name
52 for the daemon name (even if the binary has a different name). For the
53 client names you can only use the keyword ALL or IP addresses (NOT
54 host or domain names).
56 For further information please have a look at the
66 -- quota files locate in the file system's root