1rpc.mountd(8)               System Manager's Manual              rpc.mountd(8)
2
3
4

NAME

6       rpc.mountd - NFS mount daemon
7

SYNOPSIS

9       /usr/sbin/rpc.mountd [options]
10

DESCRIPTION

12       The  rpc.mountd program implements the NFS mount protocol. When receiv‐
13       ing a MOUNT request from an NFS client, it checks the  request  against
14       the list of currently exported file systems. If the client is permitted
15       to mount  the  file  system,  rpc.mountd  obtains  a  file  handle  for
16       requested directory and returns it to the client.
17
18   Exporting NFS File Systems
19       Making file systems available to NFS clients is called exporting.
20
21       Usually, a file system and the hosts it should be made available to are
22       listed in the /etc/exports file, and invoking exportfs -a whenever  the
23       system  is  booted.  The  exportfs(8)  command makes export information
24       available to both the kernel NFS server module and the rpc.mountd  dae‐
25       mon.
26
27       Alternatively,  you can export individual directories temporarily using
28       exportfs's host:/directory syntax.
29
30   The rmtab File
31       For every mount request received from an NFS client, rpc.mountd adds an
32       entry  to  the  /var/lib/nfs/rmtab  file.  When  receiving  an  unmount
33       request, that entry is removed.
34
35       However, this file is mostly ornamental. One, the client  can  continue
36       to  use  the file handle even after calling rpc.mountd 's UMOUNT proce‐
37       dure. And two, if a client reboots without  notifying  rpc.mountd  ,  a
38       stale entry will remain in rmtab.
39

OPTIONS

41       -d kind  or  --debug kind
42              Turn on debugging. Valid kinds are: all, auth, call, general and
43              parse.
44
45       -F  or  --foreground
46              Run in foreground (do not daemonize)
47
48       -f  or  --exports-file
49              This option specifies the exports file, listing the clients that
50              this server is prepared to serve and parameters to apply to each
51              such mount (see exports(5)).  By default, export information  is
52              read from /etc/exports.
53
54       -h  or  --help
55              Display usage message.
56
57       -o num  or  --descriptors num
58              Set the limit of the number of open file descriptors to num. The
59              default is to leave the limit unchanged.
60
61       -N  or  --no-nfs-version
62              This option can be used to request that rpc.mountd do not  offer
63              certain  versions  of NFS. The current version of rpc.mountd can
64              support both NFS version 2 and the newer version 3. If  the  NFS
65              kernel module was compiled without support for NFSv3, rpc.mountd
66              must be invoked with the option --no-nfs-version 3 .
67
68       -n  or  --no-tcp
69              Don't advertise TCP for mount.
70
71       -P     Ignored (compatibility with unfsd??).
72
73       -p  or  --port num
74              Force rpc.mountd to bind to the specified port num,  instead  of
75              using the random port number assigned by the portmapper.
76
77       -H  or  --ha-callout prog
78              Specify  a high availability callout program, which will receive
79              callouts for all client mount and unmount requests. This  allows
80              rpc.mountd  to be used in a High Availability NFS (HA-NFS) envi‐
81              ronment. This callout is not needed (and  should  not  be  used)
82              with  2.6  and later kernels (instead, mount the nfsd filesystem
83              on /proc/fs/nfsd ).  The program will be  called  with  4  argu‐
84              ments.  The first will be mount or unmount depending on the rea‐
85              son for the callout.  The second will be the name of the  client
86              performing  the  mount.   The  third  will  be the path that the
87              client is mounting.  The last is the number of concurrent mounts
88              that we believe the client has of that path.
89
90       -P, --state-directory-path directory
91              specify  a  directory in which to place statd state information.
92              If this option is not specified the default of  /var/lib/nfs  is
93              used.
94
95       -r, --reverse-lookup
96              mountd tracks IP addresses in the rmtab, and when a DUMP request
97              is made (by someone running  showmount  -a,  for  instance),  it
98              returns  IP  addresses  instead  of  hostnames  by default. This
99              option causes mountd to do a reverse lookup on each  IP  address
100              and  return that hostname instead. Enabling this can have a sub‐
101              stantial negative effect on performance in some situations.
102
103       -t N or --num-threads=N
104              This  option  specifies  the  number  of  worker  threads   that
105              rpc.mountd  spawns.   The default is 1 thread, which is probably
106              enough.  More threads are usually only needed  for  NFS  servers
107              which need to handle mount storms of hundreds of NFS mounts in a
108              few seconds, or when your DNS server is slow or unreliable.
109
110       -V  or  --nfs-version
111              This option can be used to request that rpc.mountd offer certain
112              versions  of  NFS. The current version of rpc.mountd can support
113              both NFS version 2 and the newer version 3.
114
115       -v  or  --version
116              Print the version of rpc.mountd and exit.
117
118       -g  or  --manage-gids
119              Accept requests from the kernel to  map  user  id  numbers  into
120              lists  of  group  id  numbers for use in access control.  An NFS
121              request will normally (except when using Kerberos or other cryp‐
122              tographic  authentication)  contains  a  user-id  and  a list of
123              group-ids.  Due to a limitation in the NFS protocol, at most  16
124              groups ids can be listed.  If you use the -g flag, then the list
125              of group ids received from the client will be replaced by a list
126              of  group ids determined by an appropriate lookup on the server.
127              Note that the 'primary' group id is not affected so  a  newgroup
128              command  on  the  client will still be effective.  This function
129              requires a Linux Kernel with version at least 2.6.21.
130
131

TCP_WRAPPERS SUPPORT

133       This rpc.mountd version is protected by the  tcp_wrapper  library.  You
134       have to give the clients access to rpc.mountd if they should be allowed
135       to use it. To allow connects from clients of the  .bar.com  domain  you
136       could use the following line in /etc/hosts.allow:
137
138       mountd: .bar.com
139
140       You have to use the daemon name mountd for the daemon name (even if the
141       binary has a different name).
142
143       For  further  information  please  have  a  look  at  the  tcpd(8)  and
144       hosts_access(5) manual pages.
145
146

SEE ALSO

148       rpc.nfsd(8), exportfs(8), exports(5), rpc.rquotad(8).
149

FILES

151       /etc/exports, /var/lib/nfs/xtab.
152

AUTHOR

154       Olaf Kirch, H. J. Lu, G. Allan Morris III, and a host of others.
155
156
157
158                                  31 Aug 2004                    rpc.mountd(8)
Impressum