are separated by a colon, while
the mount options are separated by commas. The remaining fields
are separated by blanks or tabs.
+.P
The server's hostname can be an unqualified hostname,
a fully qualified domain name,
-or a dotted quad IPv4 address.
+a dotted quad IPv4 address, or
+an IPv6 address enclosed in square brackets.
+Link-local and site-local IPv6 addresses must be accompanied by an
+interface identifier.
+See
+.BR ipv6 (7)
+for details on specifying raw IPv6 addresses.
+.P
The
.I fstype
field contains either "nfs" (for version 2 or version 3 NFS mounts)
.B nfs
file system type.
.TP 1.5i
-.BI proto= transport
-The transport the NFS client uses
+.BI proto= netid
+The transport protocol name and protocol family the NFS client uses
to transmit requests to the NFS server for this mount point.
-.I transport
-can be either
-.B udp
-or
-.BR tcp .
-Each transport uses different default
+If an NFS server has both an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, using a specific
+netid will force the use of IPv4 or IPv6 networking to communicate
+with that server.
+.IP
+If support for TI-RPC is built into the
+.B mount.nfs
+command,
+.I netid
+is a valid netid listed in
+.IR /etc/netconfig .
+Otherwise,
+.I netid
+is one of "tcp," "udp," or "rdma," and only IPv4 may be used.
+.IP
+Each transport protocol uses different default
.B retrans
and
.B timeo
-settings; refer to the description of these two mount options for details.
+settings.
+Refer to the description of these two mount options for details.
.IP
In addition to controlling how the NFS client transmits requests to
the server, this mount option also controls how the
.BR mount (8)
command communicates with the server's rpcbind and mountd services.
-Specifying
-.B proto=tcp
-forces all traffic from the
+Specifying a netid that uses TCP forces all traffic from the
.BR mount (8)
command and the NFS client to use TCP.
-Specifying
-.B proto=udp
-forces all traffic types to use UDP.
+Specifying a netid that uses UDP forces all traffic types to use UDP.
.IP
If the
.B proto
This option can be used when mounting an NFS server
through a firewall that blocks the rpcbind protocol.
.TP 1.5i
-.BI mountproto= transport
-The transport the NFS client uses
+.BI mountproto= netid
+The transport protocol name and protocol family the NFS client uses
to transmit requests to the NFS server's mountd service when performing
this mount request, and when later unmounting this mount point.
-.I transport
-can be either
-.B udp
-or
-.BR tcp .
+.IP
+If support for TI-RPC is built into the
+.B mount.nfs
+command,
+.I netid
+is a valid netid listed in
+.IR /etc/netconfig .
+Otherwise,
+.I netid
+is one of "tcp" or "udp," and only IPv4 may be used.
.IP
This option can be used when mounting an NFS server
through a firewall that blocks a particular transport.
can be specified.
If the server's mountd service is not available via the specified
transport, the mount request fails.
+.IP
Refer to the TRANSPORT METHODS section for more on how the
.B mountproto
mount option interacts with the
.B nfs4
file system type.
.TP 1.5i
-.BI proto= transport
-The transport the NFS client uses
+.BI proto= netid
+The transport protocol name and protocol family the NFS client uses
to transmit requests to the NFS server for this mount point.
-.I transport
-can be either
-.B udp
-or
-.BR tcp .
+If an NFS server has both an IPv4 and an IPv6 address, using a specific
+netid will force the use of IPv4 or IPv6 networking to communicate
+with that server.
+.IP
+If support for TI-RPC is built into the
+.B mount.nfs
+command,
+.I netid
+is a valid netid listed in
+.IR /etc/netconfig .
+Otherwise,
+.I netid
+is one of "tcp" or "udp," and only IPv4 may be used.
+.IP
All NFS version 4 servers are required to support TCP,
so if this mount option is not specified, the NFS version 4 client
-uses the TCP transport protocol.
+uses the TCP protocol.
Refer to the TRANSPORT METHODS section for more details.
.TP 1.5i
.BI port= n
the behavior of this option in more detail.
.TP 1.5i
.BI clientaddr= n.n.n.n
-Specifies a single IPv4 address (in dotted-quad form)
+Specifies a single IPv4 address (in dotted-quad form),
+or a non-link-local IPv6 address,
that the NFS client advertises to allow servers
to perform NFS version 4 callback requests against
files on this mount point. If the server is unable to
.TA 2.5i +0.7i +0.7i +.7i
server:/export /usr nfs ro,nolock,nocto,actimeo=3600 0 0
.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
+ [fe80::215:c5ff:fb3e:e2b1%eth0]:/export /mnt nfs defaults 0 0
+.FI
.SH "TRANSPORT METHODS"
NFS clients send requests to NFS servers via
Remote Procedure Calls, or
.BR mount.nfs (5),
.BR umount.nfs (5),
.BR exports (5),
+.BR netconfig (5),
+.BR ipv6 (7),
.BR nfsd (8),
.BR sm-notify (8),
.BR rpc.statd (8),