man mountd (Administration système) - NFS mount daemon
NAME
rpc.mountd - NFS mount daemon
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/rpc.mountd [options]
DESCRIPTION
The rpc.mountd program implements the NFS mount protocol. When receiving a MOUNT request from an NFS client, it checks the request against the list of currently exported file systems. If the client is permitted to mount the file system, rpc.mountd obtains a file handle for requested directory and returns it to the client.
Exporting NFS File Systems
Making file systems available to NFS clients is called exporting.
Usually, a file system and the hosts it should be made available to are listed in the /etc/exports file, and invoking exportfs -a whenever the system is booted. The exportfs(8) command makes export information available to both the kernel NFS server module and the rpc.mountd daemon.
Alternatively, you can export individual directories temporarily using exportfs's host:/directory syntax.
The rmtab File
For every mount request received from an NFS client, rpc.mountd adds an entry to the /var/lib/nfs/rmtab file. When receiving an unmount request, that entry is removed.
However, this file is mostly ornamental. One, the client can continue to use the file handle even after calling rpc.mountd 's UMOUNT procedure. And two, if a client reboots without notifying rpc.mountd , a stale entry will remain in rmtab.
OPTIONS
- -d kind or --debug kind
- Turn on debugging. Valid kinds are: all, auth, call, general and parse.
- -F or --foreground
- Run in foreground (do not daemonize)
- -f or --exports-file
- This option specifies the exports file, listing the clients that this server is prepared to serve and parameters to apply to each such mount (see exports(5)). By default, export information is read from /etc/exports.
- -h or --help
- Display usage message.
- -o num or --descriptors num
- Set the limit of the number of open file descriptors to num. The default is to leave the limit unchanged.
- -N or --no-nfs-version
- This option can be used to request that rpc.mountd do not offer certain versions of NFS. The current version of rpc.mountd can support both NFS version 2 and the newer version 3. If the NFS kernel module was compiled without support for NFSv3, rpc.mountd must be invoked with the option --no-nfs-version 3 .
- -n or --no-tcp
- Don't advertise TCP for mount.
- -P
- Ignored (compatibility with unfsd??).
- -p or --port num
- Force rpc.mountd to bind to the specified port num, instead of using the random port number assigned by the portmapper.
- -H or --ha-callout prog
- Specify a high availability callout program, which will receive callouts for all client mount and unmount requests. This allows rpc.mountd to be used in a High Availability NFS (HA-NFS) environment. This callout is not needed (and should not be used) with 2.6 and later kernels (instead, mount the nfsd filesystem on /proc/fs/nfsd ). The program will be called with 4 arguments. The first will be mount or unmount depending on the reason for the callout. The second will be the name of the client performing the mount. The third will be the path that the client is mounting. The last is the number of concurrent mounts that we believe the client has of that path.
- -V or --nfs-version
- This option can be used to request that rpc.mountd offer certain versions of NFS. The current version of rpc.mountd can support both NFS version 2 and the newer version 3.
- -v or --version
- Print the version of rpc.mountd and exit.
TCP_WRAPPERS SUPPORT
This rpc.mountd version is protected by the tcp_wrapper library. You have to give the clients access to rpc.mountd if they should be allowed to use it. To allow connects from clients of the .bar.com domain you could use the following line in /etc/hosts.allow:
mountd: .bar.com
You have to use the daemon name mountd for the daemon name (even if the binary has a different name).
For further information please have a look at the tcpd(8) and hosts_access(5) manual pages.
SEE ALSO
FILES
/etc/exports, /var/lib/nfs/xtab.
AUTHOR
Olaf Kirch, H. J. Lu, G. Allan Morris III, and a host of others.