nfs(4) File Formats nfs(4)
NAME
nfs - file containing parameter values for NFS-related daemons
SYNOPSIS
/etc/default/nfs
DESCRIPTION
The nfs file resides in directory /etc/default and provides startup parameters for the nfsd(1M) and lockd(1M) daemons.
The nfs file format is ASCII; comment lines begin with the crosshatch (#) character. Parameters consist of a keyword followed by an equals
(=) sign followed by the parameter value, of the form:
keyword=value
The following parameters are currently supported in the nfs file:
NFS_CLIENT_VERSMIN=num
NFS_CLIENT_VERSMAX=num
The NFS client only uses NFS versions in the range specified by these variables. Valid values or versions are: 2, 3, and 4. By default
these variables are unspecified (commented out) and the client's default minimum is Version 2. The default maximum is Version 4. You
can override this range on a per-mount basis by using the -o vers= option to mount_nfs(1M).
NFS_SERVER_VERSMIN=num
NFS_SERVER_VERSMAX=num
The NFS server only uses NFS versions in the range specified by these variables. Valid values or versions are: 2, 3, and 4. As with the
client, the default is to leave these variables commented out and the default minimum version is 2, while the default maximum version
is 4.
NFS_SERVER_DELEGATION=on | off
By default, this variable is commented out and the NFS server provides delegations to clients. The user can turn off delegations for
all exported filesystems by setting this variable to off (case-sensitive). This variable only applies to NFS Version 4.
NFSMAPID_DOMAIN=domain-string
By default, the nfsmapid uses the DNS domain of the system. This setting overrides the default. This domain is used for identifying
user and group attribute strings in the NFS Version 4 protocol. Clients and servers must match with this domain for operation to pro-
ceed normally. This variable only applies to NFS Version 4. See "Setting NFSMAPID_DOMAIN," below for further details.
NFSD_MAX_CONNECTIONS=num
Sets the maximum number of concurrent, connection-oriented connections. The default is unlimited and is obtained by not setting (that
is, commenting out) NFSD_MAX_CONNECTIONS. Equivalent to the -c option in nfsd.
NFSD_LISTEN_BACKLOG=num
Set connection queue length for the NFS over a connection-oriented transport. The default value is 32, meaning 32 entries in the queue.
Equivalent to the -l option in nfsd.
NFSD_PROTOCOL=ALL
Start nfsd over the specified protocol only. Equivalent to the -p option in nfsd. ALL is equivalent to -a on the nfsd command line.
Mutually exlusive of NFSD_DEVICE. One or the other of NFSD_DEVICE and NFSD_PROTOCOL must be commented out. For the UDP protocol, only
version 2 and version 3 service is established. NFS Version 4 is not supported for the UDP protocol.
NFSD_DEVICE=devname
Start NFS daemon for the transport specified by the given device only. Equivalent to the -t option in nfsd. Mutually exclusive of
NFSD_PROTOCOL. One or the other of NFSD_DEVICE and NFSD_PROTOCOL must be commented out.
NFSD_SERVERS=num
Maximum number of concurrent NFS requests. Equivalent to last numeric argument on the nfsd command line. The default is 16.
LOCKD_LISTEN_BACKLOG=num
Set connection queue length for lockd over a connection-oriented transport. The default and minimum value is 32.
LOCKD_SERVERS=num
Maximum number of concurrent lockd requests. The default is 20.
LOCKD_RETRANSMIT_TIMEOUT=num
Retransmit timeout, in seconds, before lockd retries. The default is 5.
GRACE_PERIOD=num
Grace period, in seconds, that all clients (both NLM and NFSv4) have to reclaim locks after a server reboot. This parameter also con-
trols the NFSv4 lease interval and overrides the deprecated setting LOCKD_GRACE_PERIOD. The default is 90.
LOCKD_GRACE_PERIOD=num
Deprecated. Same as GRACE_PERIOD=num above. The default is 90.
Setting NFSMAPID_DOMAIN
As described above, the setting for NFSMAPID_DOMAIN overrides the domain used by nfsmapid(1M) for building and comparing outbound and
inbound attribute strings, respectively. This setting overrides any other mechanism for setting the NFSv4 domain. In the absence of a
NFSMAPID_DOMAIN setting, the nfsmapid(1M) daemon determines the NFSv4 domain as follows:
o If a properly configured /etc/resolv.conf (see resolv.conf(4)) exists, nfsmapid queries specified nameserver(s) for the domain.
o If a properly configured /etc/resolv.conf (see resolv.conf(4)) exists, but the queried nameserver does not have a proper record of the
domain name, nfsmapid attempts to obtain the domain name through the BIND interface (see resolver(3RESOLV)).
o
If no /etc/resolv.conf exists, nfsmapid falls back on using the configured domain name (see domainname(1M)), which is returned with
the leading domain suffix removed. For example, for widgets.sales.acme.com, sales.acme.com is returned.
o If /etc/resolv.conf does not exist, no domain name has been configured (or no /etc/defaultdomain exists), nfsmapid falls back on
obtaining the domain name from the host name, if the host name contains a fully qualified domain name (FQDN).
If a domainname is still not obtained following all of the preceding steps, nfsmapid will have no domain configured. This results in the
following behavior:
o Outbound "owner" and "owner_group" attribute strings are encoded as literal id's. For example, the UID 12345 is encoded as 12345.
o nfsmapid ignores the "domain" portion of the inbound attribute string and performs name service lookups only for the user or group. If
the user/group exists in the local system name service databases, then the proper uid/gid will be mapped even when no domain has been
configured.
This behavior implies that the same administrative user/group domain exists between NFSv4 client and server (that is, the same
uid/gid's for users/groups on both client and server). In the case of overlapping id spaces, the inbound attribute string could poten-
tially be mapped to the wrong id. However, this is not functionally different from mapping the inbound string to nobody, yet provides
greater flexibility.
SEE ALSO
lockd(1M), mount_nfs(1M), nfsd(1M), nfsmapid(1M)
System Administration Guide: Network Services
SunOS 5.10 13 Oct 2004 nfs(4)