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Operating Systems Solaris NFS mount. Nobody Nobody permissions. Post 302240220 by gwhelan on Thursday 25th of September 2008 08:05:39 AM
Old 09-25-2008
I am using NFS version 4. Here is the /etc/default/nfs file.

# cat /etc/default/nfs
# ident "@(#)nfs 1.10 04/09/01 SMI"
#
# Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
# Use is subject to license terms.
#

# Sets the maximum number of concurrent connection oriented connections.
# Default is unlimited and is obtained by not setting NFSD_MAX_CONNECTIONS.
# Equivalent to -c.
#NFSD_MAX_CONNECTIONS=

# Set connection queue length for the NFS over a connection-oriented
# transport. The default value is 32 entries.
# Equivalent to -l.
NFSD_LISTEN_BACKLOG=32

# Start NFS daemon over the specified protocol only.
# Equivalent to -p, ALL is equivalent to -a on the nfsd command line.
# Mutually exclusive with NFSD_DEVICE.
NFSD_PROTOCOL=ALL

# Start NFS daemon for the transport specified by the given device only.
# Equivalent to -t.
# Mutually exclusive with setting NFSD_PROTOCOL.
#NFSD_DEVICE=

# Maximum number of concurrent NFS requests.
# Equivalent to last numeric argument on nfsd command line.
NFSD_SERVERS=16

# Set connection queue length for lockd over a connection-oriented transport.
# Default and minimum value is 32.
LOCKD_LISTEN_BACKLOG=32

# Maximum number of concurrent lockd requests.
# Default is 20.
LOCKD_SERVERS=20

# Retransmit Timeout before lockd tries again.
# Default is 5.
LOCKD_RETRANSMIT_TIMEOUT=5

# Grace period in seconds that all clients (both NLM & NFSv4) have to
# reclaim locks after a server reboot. Also controls the NFSv4 lease
# interval.
# Overrides the deprecated setting LOCKD_GRACE_PERIOD.
# Default is 90 seconds.
GRACE_PERIOD=90

# Deprecated.
# As for GRACE_PERIOD, above.
# Default is 90 seconds.
#LOCKD_GRACE_PERIOD=90

# Sets the minimum version of the NFS protocol that will be registered
# and offered by the server. The default is 2.
#NFS_SERVER_VERSMIN=2

# Sets the maximum version of the NFS protocol that will be registered
# and offered by the server. The default is 4.
#NFS_SERVER_VERSMAX=4

# Sets the minimum version of the NFS protocol that will be used by
# the NFS client. Can be overridden by the "vers=" NFS mount option.
# The default is 2.
#NFS_CLIENT_VERSMIN=2

# Sets the maximum version of the NFS protocol that will be used by
# the NFS client. Can be overridden by the "vers=" NFS mount option.
# If "vers=" is not specified for an NFS mount, this is the version
# that will be attempted first. The default is 4.
#NFS_CLIENT_VERSMAX=4

# Determines if the NFS version 4 delegation feature will be enabled
# for the server. If it is enabled, the server will attempt to
# provide delegations to the NFS version 4 client. The default is on.
#NFS_SERVER_DELEGATION=on

# Specifies to nfsmapid daemon that it is to override its default
# behavior of using the DNS domain, and that it is to use 'domain' as
# the domain to append to outbound attribute strings, and that it is to
# use 'domain' to compare against inbound attribute strings.
#NFSMAPID_DOMAIN=domain
#
 

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nfsd(1M)																  nfsd(1M)

NAME
nfsd - NFS daemon SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/nfs/nfsd [-a] [-c #_conn] [-l listen_backlog] [-p protocol] [-t device] [nservers] nfsd is the daemon that handles client file system requests. Only users with {PRIV_SYS_NFS} and sufficient privileges to write to /var/run can run this daemon. The nfsd daemon is automatically invoked using share(1M) with the -a option. By default, nfsd starts over the TCP and UDP transports for versions 2 and 3. By default, it starts over the TCP for version 4. You can change this with the -p option. A previously invoked nfsd daemon started with or without options must be stopped before invoking another nfsd command. Administrators wanting to change startup parameters for nfsd should, as root, make changes in the /etc/default/nfs file. See nfs(4). The following options are supported: -a Start a NFS daemon over all available connectionless and connection-oriented transports, including UDP and TCP. Equivalent of setting the NFSD_PROTOCOL parameter to ALL in the nfs file. -c #_conn This sets the maximum number of connections allowed to the NFS server over connection-oriented transports. By default, the number of connections is unlimited. Equivalent of the NFSD_MAX_CONNECTIONS parameter in the nfs file. -l Set connection queue length for the NFS TCP over a connection-oriented transport. The default value is 32 entries. Equiva- lent of the NFSD_LISTEN_BACKLOG parameter in the nfs file. -p protocol Start a NFS daemon over the specified protocol. Equivalent of the NFSD_PROTOCOL parameter in the nfs file. -t device Start a NFS daemon for the transport specified by the given device. Equivalent of the NFSD_DEVICE parameter in the nfs file. The following operands are supported: nservers This sets the maximum number of concurrent NFS requests that the server can handle. This concurrency is achieved by up to nservers threads created as needed in the kernel. nservers should be based on the load expected on this server. 16 is the usual number of nservers. If nservers is not specified, the maximum number of concurrent NFS requests will default to 1. Equivalent of the NFSD_SERVERS parameter in the nfs file. USAGE
If the NFS_PORTMON variable is set in /etc/system, then clients are required to use privileged ports (ports < IPPORT_RESERVED) to get NFS services. This variable is equal to zero by default. This variable has been moved from the "nfs" module to the "nfssrv" module. To set the variable, edit the /etc/system file and add this entry: set nfssrv:nfs_portmon = 1 0 Daemon started successfully. 1 Daemon failed to start. .nfsXXX Client machine pointer to an open-but-unlinked file. /etc/default/nfs Contains startup parameters for nfsd. /etc/system System configuration information file. /var/nfs/v4_state Directories used by the server to manage client state information. These directories should not be removed. /var/nfs/v4_oldstate See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWnfssu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ ps(1), svcs(1), mountd(1M), share(1M), svcadm(1M), nfs(4), sharetab(4), system(4), attributes(5), smf(5) Manually starting and restarting nfsd is not recommended. If it is necessary to do so, use svcadm to enable or disable the nfs service (svc:/network/nfs/server). If it is disabled, it will be enabled by share_nfs(1M), unless its application/auto_enable property is set to false. See the , and svcadm(1M) for more information. The nfsd service is managed by the service management facility, smf(5), under the service identifier: svc:/network/nfs/server Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). The ser- vice's status can be queried using the svcs(1) command. If nfsd is killed with SIGTERM, it will not be restarted by the service management facility. Instead, nfsd can be restarted by other sig- nals, such as SIGINT. 27 Apr 2005 nfsd(1M)
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