X-Git-Url: https://git.decadent.org.uk/gitweb/?p=nfs-utils.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=utils%2Fexportfs%2Fexports.man;h=034a896225e09c84001e9365b941397b54350306;hp=4b31ccf9c03e1316f3483a8d7cf3810a29ee7f91;hb=7b8b7f8f47892f38432fda434ea8d84fa87a9360;hpb=8d53a2630763f8f639d2de2ddd26282bff1c7cad diff --git a/utils/exportfs/exports.man b/utils/exportfs/exports.man index 4b31ccf..034a896 100644 --- a/utils/exportfs/exports.man +++ b/utils/exportfs/exports.man @@ -17,15 +17,18 @@ and to the kernel based NFS file server daemon .PP The file format is similar to the SunOS .I exports -file, except that several additional options are permitted. Each line -contains an export point and a list of machine or netgroup names allowed -to mount the file system at that point. An optional parenthesized list -of export parameters may follow each machine name. Blank lines are -ignored, and a # introduces a comment to the end of the line. Entries may -be continued across newlines using a backslash. If export name contains spaces -it should be quoted using double-quotes. You can also specify spaces -or any other unusual characters in the export path name using a -backslash followed by the character code as 3 octal digits. +file. Each line contains an export point and a whitespace-separated list +of clients allowed to mount the file system at that point. Each listed +client may be immediately followed by a parenthesized, comma-separated +list of export options for that client. No whitespace is permitted +between a client and its option list. +.PP +Blank lines are ignored. A pound sign ("#") introduces a comment to the +end of the line. Entries may be continued across newlines using a +backslash. If an export name contains spaces it should be quoted using +double quotes. You can also specify spaces or other unusual character in +the export name using a backslash followed by the character code as three +octal digits. .PP .SS Machine Name Formats NFS clients may be specified in a number of ways: @@ -42,9 +45,10 @@ parts or those containing a single dash (\-) are ignored. .IP "wildcards Machine names may contain the wildcard characters \fI*\fR and \fI?\fR. This can be used to make the \fIexports\fR file more compact; for instance, -\fI*.cs.foo.edu\fR matches all hosts in the domain \fIcs.foo.edu\fR. However, -these wildcard characters do not match the dots in a domain name, so the -above pattern does not include hosts such as \fIa.b.cs.foo.edu\fR. +\fI*.cs.foo.edu\fR matches all hosts in the domain +\fIcs.foo.edu\fR. As these characters also match the dots in a domain +name, the given pattern will also match all hosts within any subdomain +of \fIcs.foo.edu\fR. .IP "IP networks You can also export directories to all hosts on an IP (sub-) network simultaneously. This is done by specifying an IP address and netmask pair @@ -53,8 +57,9 @@ as where the netmask can be specified in dotted-decimal format, or as a contiguous mask length (for example, either `/255.255.252.0' or `/22' appended to the network base address result in identical subnetworks with 10 bits of -host). -.TP +host). Wildcard characters generally do not work on IP addresses, though they +may work by accident when reverse DNS lookups fail. +'''.TP '''.B =public '''This is a special ``hostname'' that identifies the given directory name '''as the public root directory (see the section on WebNFS in @@ -91,17 +96,31 @@ This can also be made explicit by using the .IR ro " option. .TP -.IR sync -This option requests that all file writes be committed to disc before -the write request completes. This is required for complete safety of -data in the face of a server crash, but incurs a performance hit. -The default is to allow the server to write the data out whenever it -is ready. This can be explicitly requested with the -.IR async " option. +.IR async +This option allows the NFS server to violate the NFS protocol and +reply to requests before any changes made by that request have been +committed to stable storage (e.g. disc drive). + +Using this option usually improves performance, but at the cost that +an unclean server restart (i.e. a crash) can cause data to be lost or +corrupted. + +In releases of nfs-utils upto and including 1.0.0, this option was the +default. In this and future releases, +.I sync +is the default, and +.I async +must be explicit requested if needed. +To help make system adminstrators aware of this change, 'exportfs' +will issue a warning if neither +.I sync +nor +.I async +is specified. .TP .IR no_wdelay -This option only has effect if -.I sync +This option has no effect if +.I async is also set. The NFS server will normally delay committing a write request to disc slightly if it suspects that another related write request may be in progress or may arrive soon. This allows multiple write requests to @@ -218,6 +237,47 @@ or '''.TP '''.IR link_absolute '''Leave all symbolic link as they are. This is the default operation. + +.TP +.IR mountpoint= path +.TP +.I mp +This option makes it possible to only export a directory if it has +successfully been mounted. +If no path is given (e.g. +.IR mountpoint " or " mp ) +then the export point must also be a mount point. If it isn't then +the export point is not exported. This allows you to be sure that the +directory underneath a mountpoint will never be exported by accident +if, for example, the filesystem failed to mount due to a disc error. + +If a path is given (e.g. +.IR mountpoint= "/path or " mp= /path) +then the nominted path must be a mountpoint for the exportpoint to be +exported. + +.TP +.IR fsid= num +This option forces the filesystem identification portion of the file +handle and file attributes used on the wire to be +.I num +instead of a number derived from the major and minor number of the +block device on which the filesystem is mounted. Any 32 bit number +can be used, but it must be unique amongst all the exported filesystems. + +This can be useful for NFS failover, to ensure that both servers of +the failover pair use the same NFS file handles for the shared filesystem +thus avoiding stale file handles after failover. + +Some Linux filesystems are not mounted on a block device; exporting +these via NFS requires the use of the +.I fsid +option (although that may still not be enough). + +The value 0 has a special meaning when use with NFSv4. NFSv4 has a +concept of a root of the overall exported filesystem. The export point +exported with fsid=0 will be used as this root. + .SS User ID Mapping .PP .I nfsd