X-Git-Url: https://git.decadent.org.uk/gitweb/?p=nfs-utils.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=utils%2Fexportfs%2Fexports.man;h=87fd50ec2f714d91a730fc1c56d421b59936a7b4;hp=4b31ccf9c03e1316f3483a8d7cf3810a29ee7f91;hb=7f23a81a22248720b4dbc3cf7f15cc8812e9cfac;hpb=c69020c28de49ab71da0389199c45d104f170656 diff --git a/utils/exportfs/exports.man b/utils/exportfs/exports.man index 4b31ccf..87fd50e 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: @@ -53,7 +56,8 @@ 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). +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