03-01-2002
You kinda lost me here, so I may be misunderstanding your question. But here goes....
If you want clientsystem to automatically mount directories then clientsystem must have the automounter running. The serversystem must have exported, or to use Sun's language, shared the stuff to be mounted. It is not relevant if serversystem is running the automounter, but it needs the NFS server daemons.
NIS and NIS+ are not required. But the user is then in local passwd and shadow files and needs to enter a password if you gave him one. Once he signs on he gets a uid and several gid's. These control what files he can access. This includes his home directory even if it is automounted. So the user will need an identical account on serversystem and this account will need to own the home directory.
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autofsd(8) System Manager's Manual autofsd(8)
NAME
autofsd, autofs - Automatically and transparently mounts and unmounts NFS file systems
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/autofsd [-dv] [-D name=value]
OPTIONS
Enables debugging. When debugging is enabled, the daemon does not disassociate itself from the current tty. Messages that trace autofsd
activity are written to standard output. Logs verbose output. Defines an autofsd environment variable by assigning value to the variable.
DESCRIPTION
The autofsd daemon automatically and transparently mounts and unmounts NFS file systems on an as-needed basis. Like the automount daemon,
it provides another alternative to using the /etc/fstab file for mounting NFS file systems on client machines. However, AutoFS is more
efficient than the automount daemon because it requires less communication between the kernel and the user space daemon.
The autofsd daemon also provides higher availability than the automount daemon. Although autofsd must be running for mounts or unmounts to
be performed, if it is killed or becomes unavailable, exisiting auto-mounted NFS file systems continue to be available.
The autofsd daemon can be started from the command line or from the /sbin/rc3.d/nfs script, which reads the /etc/rc.config.common file.
Once started, it remains dormant until a user attempts to access a directory (or any file or directory in the directory hierarchy) that is
associated with an AutoFS map. The daemon then consults the appropriate map and mounts the NFS file system as specified.
AutoFS maps indicate where to find the file system to be mounted and the mount options to use. The names of the maps are passed to the aut-
ofsd daemon through the autofsmount command. For more information about AutoFS maps and the autofsmount command, see autofsmount(8) and
the Network Administration guide. Also, see sys_attrs_autofs(5) for information on tuning AutoFS.
Note
The autofsmount program reads AutoFS maps at startup. If you make any changes to the maps after startup, you must execute the autofsmount
command again to incorporate the changes.
By default, AutoFS uses UDP transport. If the tcp option is specified in a map, AutoFS attempts to use TCP. If TCP is not available, Aut-
oFS then reverts to UDP.
RESTRICTIONS
There is no support in the autofsd daemon that is analogous to the SIGTERM support in the automount command.
If a file system is locally served, the autofsd daemon creates a symbolic link on the system instead of NFS mounting the directory. If
locally serving the directory would result in a circular link, the daemon selects an external server (if available).
SEE ALSO
Commands: autofsmount(8), automount(8), mount(8)
Others: sys_attrs_autofs(5)
Network Administration
autofsd(8)