The fifth and sixth fields on each line are not used
by NFS, thus conventionally each contain the digit zero. For example:
.P
-.SP
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i +0.75i +0.75i +1.0i
+.nf
+.ta 8n +14n +14n +9n +20n
server:path /mountpoint fstype option,option,... 0 0
-.FI
+.fi
.P
The server's hostname and export pathname
are separated by a colon, while
option.
.TP 1.5i
.BI timeo= n
-The time (in tenths of a second) the NFS client waits for a
-response before it retries an NFS request. If this
-option is not specified, requests are retried every
-60 seconds for NFS over TCP.
-The NFS client does not perform any kind of timeout backoff
-for NFS over TCP.
+The time in deciseconds (tenths of a second) the NFS client waits for a
+response before it retries an NFS request.
+.IP
+For NFS over TCP the default
+.B timeo
+value is 600 (60 seconds).
+The NFS client performs linear backoff: After each retransmission the
+timeout is increased by
+.BR timeo
+up to the maximum of 600 seconds.
.IP
However, for NFS over UDP, the client uses an adaptive
algorithm to estimate an appropriate timeout value for frequently used
.BR krb5p ,
.BR lkey ,
.BR lkeyi ,
-.BR lkeyp ,
-.BR spkm ,
-.BR spkmi ,
and
-.BR spkmp .
+.BR lkeyp ,
Refer to the SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS section for details.
.TP 1.5i
.BR sharecache " / " nosharecache
is specified, the client assumes that POSIX locks are local and uses NLM
sideband protocol to lock files when flock locks are used.
.IP
-To support legacy flock behavior similar to that of NFS clients < 2.6.12, use
-'local_lock=flock'. This option is required when exporting NFS mounts via
+To support legacy flock behavior similar to that of NFS clients < 2.6.12,
+use 'local_lock=flock'. This option is required when exporting NFS mounts via
Samba as Samba maps Windows share mode locks as flock. Since NFS clients >
2.6.12 implement flock by emulating POSIX locks, this will result in
conflicting locks.
file causes the mount command to negotiate
reasonable defaults for NFS behavior.
.P
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i +0.7i +0.7i +.7i
+.nf
+.ta 8n +16n +6n +6n +30n
server:/export /mnt nfs defaults 0 0
-.FI
+.fi
.P
Here is an example from an /etc/fstab file for an NFS version 2 mount over UDP.
.P
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i +0.7i +0.7i +.7i
+.nf
+.ta 8n +16n +6n +6n +30n
server:/export /mnt nfs nfsvers=2,proto=udp 0 0
-.FI
+.fi
.P
Try this example to mount using NFS version 4 over TCP
with Kerberos 5 mutual authentication.
.P
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i +0.7i +0.7i +.7i
+.nf
+.ta 8n +16n +6n +6n +30n
server:/export /mnt nfs4 sec=krb5 0 0
-.FI
+.fi
.P
This example can be used to mount /usr over NFS.
.P
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i +0.7i +0.7i +.7i
+.nf
+.ta 8n +16n +6n +6n +30n
server:/export /usr nfs ro,nolock,nocto,actimeo=3600 0 0
-.FI
+.fi
.P
This example shows how to mount an NFS server
using a raw IPv6 link-local address.
.P
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i +0.7i +0.7i +.7i
+.nf
+.ta 8n +40n +5n +4n +9n
[fe80::215:c5ff:fb3e:e2b1%eth0]:/export /mnt nfs defaults 0 0
-.FI
+.fi
.SH "TRANSPORT METHODS"
NFS clients send requests to NFS servers via
Remote Procedure Calls, or
to prevent data exposure during network transit; however,
expect some performance impact
when using integrity checking or encryption.
-Similar support for other forms of cryptographic security (such as lipkey and SPKM3)
+Similar support for other forms of cryptographic security (such as lipkey)
is also available.
.P
The NFS version 4 protocol allows
specify either the local mount directory, or the server hostname and
export pathname, but not both, during a remount. For example,
.P
-.NF
-.TA 2.5i
+.nf
+.ta 8n
mount -o remount,ro /mnt
-.FI
+.fi
.P
merges the mount option
.B ro