1nbdkit(1)                           NBDKIT                           nbdkit(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       nbdkit - toolkit for creating NBD servers
7

SYNOPSIS

9        nbdkit [-D|--debug PLUGIN|FILTER.FLAG=N]
10               [-e|--exportname EXPORTNAME] [--exit-with-parent]
11               [--filter FILTER ...] [-f|--foreground]
12               [-g|--group GROUP] [-i|--ipaddr IPADDR]
13               [--log stderr|syslog]
14               [-n|--newstyle] [-o|--oldstyle]
15               [-P|--pidfile PIDFILE]
16               [-p|--port PORT] [-r|--readonly]
17               [--run CMD] [-s|--single] [--selinux-label LABEL]
18               [-t|--threads THREADS]
19               [--tls off|on|require]
20               [--tls-certificates /path/to/certificates]
21               [--tls-psk /path/to/pskfile] [--tls-verify-peer]
22               [-U|--unix SOCKET] [-u|--user USER]
23               [-v|--verbose] [-V|--version]
24               PLUGIN [[KEY=]VALUE [KEY=VALUE [...]]]
25
26        nbdkit --dump-config
27
28        nbdkit PLUGIN --dump-plugin
29
30        nbdkit --help
31

DESCRIPTION

33       Network Block Device (NBD) is a network protocol for accessing block
34       devices over the network.  Block devices are hard disks and things that
35       behave like hard disks such as disk images and virtual machines.
36
37       nbdkit is both a toolkit for creating NBD servers from “unconventional”
38       sources, and the name of an NBD server.  nbdkit ships with many plugins
39       for performing common tasks like serving local files.
40
41   Plugins and filters
42       nbdkit is different from other NBD servers because you can easily
43       create new Network Block Device sources by writing a few glue
44       functions, possibly in C, or perhaps in a high level language like Perl
45       or Python.  The liberal licensing of nbdkit is meant to allow you to
46       link nbdkit with proprietary libraries or to include nbdkit in
47       proprietary code.
48
49       If you want to write your own nbdkit plugin you should read
50       nbdkit-plugin(3).
51
52       nbdkit also has a concept of filters which can be layered on top of
53       plugins.  Several filters are provided with nbdkit and if you want to
54       write your own you should read nbdkit-filter(3).
55

EXAMPLES

57   Basic file serving
58       ·   Serve file disk.img on port 10809 using nbdkit-file-plugin(1), and
59           connect to it using guestfish(1):
60
61            nbdkit file disk.img
62            guestfish --rw --format=raw -a nbd://localhost
63
64       ·   Serve file disk.img on port 10809, requiring clients to use
65           encrypted (TLS) connections:
66
67            nbdkit --tls=require file disk.img
68
69   Other nbdkit plugins
70       ·   Create a 1MB disk with one empty partition entirely on the command
71           line using nbdkit-data-plugin(1):
72
73            nbdkit data size=1M \
74                        data="@0x1b8 0xf8 0x21 0xdc 0xeb 0 0 0 0
75                              2 0 0x83 0x20 0x20 0 1 0  0 0 0xff 0x7
76                              @0x1fe 0x55 0xaa"
77
78       ·   Forward an NBD connection to a remote server over HTTPS or SSH
79           using nbdkit-curl-plugin(1) or nbdkit-ssh-plugin(1):
80
81            nbdkit -r curl https://example.com/disk.img
82
83            nbdkit ssh host=example.com /var/tmp/disk.img
84
85       ·   Create a RAM disk using nbdkit-memory-plugin(1):
86
87            nbdkit memory size=64M
88
89       ·   Create a floppy disk image containing files from a local directory
90           using nbdkit-floppy-plugin(1):
91
92            nbdkit floppy dir/
93
94   Combining plugins and filters
95       ·   Serve only the first partition from compressed disk image
96           disk.img.xz, combining nbdkit-partition-filter(1),
97           nbdkit-xz-filter(1) and nbdkit-file-plugin(1).
98
99            nbdkit --filter=partition --filter=xz file disk.img.xz partition=1
100
101           To understand this command line:
102
103                                        plugin name and plugin parameter
104
105                                                  ┌───────┴──────┐
106                                                  │              │
107            nbdkit --filter=partition --filter=xz file disk.img.xz partition=1
108                            │              │                          │
109                            └──────────────┴────┬─────────────────────┘
110
111                                   filters and filter parameter
112
113       ·   Create a scratch, empty nbdkit device and inject errors and delays,
114           for testing clients, using nbdkit-memory-plugin(1),
115           nbdkit-error-filter(1) and nbdkit-delay-filter(1):
116
117            nbdkit --filter=error --filter=delay memory size=100M \
118                   error-rate=10% rdelay=1 wdelay=1
119
120   Writing plugins in scripting languages
121       ·   Write a simple, custom plugin entirely on the command line in shell
122           script using nbdkit-sh-plugin(3):
123
124            nbdkit sh - <<'EOF'
125              case "$1" in
126                get_size) echo 1M ;;
127                pread) dd if=/dev/zero count=$3 iflag=count_bytes ;;
128                *) exit 2 ;;
129              esac
130            EOF
131
132   Display information
133       Display information about nbdkit or a specific plugin:
134
135        nbdkit --help
136        nbdkit --version
137        nbdkit --dump-config
138        nbdkit example1 --help
139        nbdkit example1 --dump-plugin
140

GLOBAL OPTIONS

142       --help
143           Display brief command line usage information and exit.
144
145       -D PLUGIN.FLAG=N
146       -D FILTER.FLAG=N
147       --debug PLUGIN.FLAG=N
148       --debug FILTER.FLAG=N
149           Set the plugin or filter Debug Flag called "FLAG" to the integer
150           value "N".  See "Debug Flags" in nbdkit-plugin(3).
151
152       --dump-config
153           Dump out the compile-time configuration values and exit.  See
154           nbdkit-probing(1).
155
156       --dump-plugin
157           Dump out information about the plugin and exit.  See
158           nbdkit-probing(1).
159
160       --exit-with-parent
161           If the parent process exits, we exit.  This can be used to avoid
162           complicated cleanup or orphaned nbdkit processes.  There are some
163           important caveats with this, see "EXIT WITH PARENT" in
164           nbdkit-captive(1).
165
166           An alternative to this is "CAPTIVE NBDKIT" in nbdkit-captive(1).
167
168           This option implies --foreground.
169
170       -e EXPORTNAME
171       --export EXPORTNAME
172       --export-name EXPORTNAME
173       --exportname EXPORTNAME
174           Set the exportname.
175
176           If not set, exportname "" (empty string) is used.  Exportnames are
177           not allowed with the oldstyle protocol.
178
179       -f
180       --foreground
181       --no-fork
182           Don't fork into the background.
183
184       --filter FILTER
185           Add a filter before the plugin.  This option may be given one or
186           more times to stack filters in front of the plugin.  They are
187           processed in the order they appear on the command line.  See
188           "FILTERS" and nbdkit-filter(3).
189
190       -g GROUP
191       --group GROUP
192           Change group to "GROUP" after starting up.  A group name or numeric
193           group ID can be used.
194
195           The server needs sufficient permissions to be able to do this.
196           Normally this would mean starting the server up as root.
197
198           See also -u.
199
200       -i IPADDR
201       --ip-addr IPADDR
202       --ipaddr IPADDR
203           Listen on the specified interface.  The default is to listen on all
204           interfaces.  See also -p.
205
206       --log=stderr
207       --log=syslog
208           Send error messages to either standard error (--log=stderr) or to
209           the system log (--log=syslog).
210
211           The default is to send error messages to stderr, unless nbdkit
212           forks into the background in which case they are sent to syslog.
213
214           For more details see "LOGGING" in nbdkit-service(1).
215
216       -n
217       --new-style
218       --newstyle
219           Use the newstyle NBD protocol protocol.  This is the default in
220           nbdkit ≥ 1.3.  In earlier versions the default was oldstyle.  See
221           nbdkit-protocol(1).
222
223       -o
224       --old-style
225       --oldstyle
226           Use the oldstyle NBD protocol.  This was the default in nbdkit ≤
227           1.2, but now the default is newstyle.  Note this is incompatible
228           with newer features such as export names and TLS.  See
229           nbdkit-protocol(1).
230
231       -P PIDFILE
232       --pid-file PIDFILE
233       --pidfile PIDFILE
234           Write "PIDFILE" (containing the process ID of the server) after
235           nbdkit becomes ready to accept connections.
236
237           If the file already exists, it is overwritten.  nbdkit does not
238           delete the file when it exits.
239
240       -p PORT
241       --port PORT
242           Change the TCP/IP port number on which nbdkit serves requests.  The
243           default is 10809.  See also -i.
244
245       -r
246       --read-only
247       --readonly
248           The export will be read-only.  If a client writes, then it will get
249           an error.
250
251           Note that some plugins inherently don't support writes.  With those
252           plugins the -r option is added implicitly.
253
254           nbdkit-cow-filter(1) can be placed over read-only plugins to
255           provide copy-on-write (or "snapshot") functionality.  If you are
256           using qemu as a client then it also supports snapshots.
257
258       --run CMD
259           Run nbdkit as a captive subprocess of "CMD".  When "CMD" exits,
260           nbdkit is killed.  See "CAPTIVE NBDKIT" in nbdkit-captive(1).
261
262           This option implies --foreground.
263
264       -s
265       --single
266       --stdin
267           Don't fork.  Handle a single NBD connection on stdin/stdout.  After
268           stdin closes, the server exits.
269
270           You can use this option to run nbdkit from inetd or similar
271           superservers; or just for testing; or if you want to run nbdkit in
272           a non-conventional way.  Note that if you want to run nbdkit from
273           systemd, then it may be better to use "SOCKET ACTIVATION" in
274           nbdkit-service(1) instead of this option.
275
276           This option implies --foreground.
277
278       --selinux-label SOCKET-LABEL
279           Apply the SELinux label "SOCKET-LABEL" to the nbdkit listening
280           socket.
281
282           The common — perhaps only — use of this option is to allow libvirt
283           guests which are using SELinux and sVirt confinement to access
284           nbdkit Unix domain sockets:
285
286            nbdkit --selinux-label system_u:object_r:svirt_t:s0 ...
287
288       -t THREADS
289       --threads THREADS
290           Set the number of threads to be used per connection, which in turn
291           controls the number of outstanding requests that can be processed
292           at once.  Only matters for plugins with thread_model=parallel
293           (where it defaults to 16).  To force serialized behavior (useful if
294           the client is not prepared for out-of-order responses), set this to
295           1.
296
297       --tls=off
298       --tls=on
299       --tls=require
300           Disable, enable or require TLS (authentication and encryption
301           support).  See nbdkit-tls(1).
302
303       --tls-certificates /path/to/certificates
304           Set the path to the TLS certificates directory.  If not specified,
305           some built-in paths are checked.  See nbdkit-tls(1) for more
306           details.
307
308       --tls-psk /path/to/pskfile
309           Set the path to the pre-shared keys (PSK) file.  If used, this
310           overrides certificate authentication.  There is no built-in path.
311           See nbdkit-tls(1) for more details.
312
313       --tls-verify-peer
314           Enables TLS client certificate verification.  The default is not to
315           check the client's certificate.
316
317       -U SOCKET
318       --unix SOCKET
319       -U -
320       --unix -
321           Accept connections on the Unix domain socket "SOCKET" (which is a
322           path).
323
324           nbdkit creates this socket, but it will probably have incorrect
325           permissions (too permissive).  If it is a problem that some
326           unauthorized user could connect to this socket between the time
327           that nbdkit starts up and the authorized user connects, then put
328           the socket into a directory that has restrictive permissions.
329
330           nbdkit does not delete the socket file when it exits.  The caller
331           should delete the socket file after use (else if you try to start
332           nbdkit up again you will get an "Address already in use" error).
333
334           If the socket name is - then nbdkit generates a randomly named
335           private socket.  This is useful with "CAPTIVE NBDKIT" in
336           nbdkit-captive(1).
337
338       -u USER
339       --user USER
340           Change user to "USER" after starting up.  A user name or numeric
341           user ID can be used.
342
343           The server needs sufficient permissions to be able to do this.
344           Normally this would mean starting the server up as root.
345
346           See also -g.
347
348       -v
349       --verbose
350           Enable verbose messages.
351
352           It's a good idea to use -f as well so the process does not fork
353           into the background (but not required).
354
355       -V
356       --version
357           Print the version number of nbdkit and exit.
358

PLUGIN NAME

360       You can give the full path to the plugin, like this:
361
362        nbdkit $libdir/nbdkit/plugins/nbdkit-file-plugin.so [...]
363
364       but it is usually more convenient to use this equivalent syntax:
365
366        nbdkit file [...]
367
368       $libdir is set at compile time.  To print it out, do:
369
370        nbdkit --dump-config
371

PLUGIN CONFIGURATION

373       After specifying the plugin name you can (optionally, it depends on the
374       plugin) give plugin configuration on the command line in the form of
375       "key=value".  For example:
376
377        nbdkit file file=disk.img
378
379       To list all the options supported by a plugin, do:
380
381        nbdkit --help file
382
383       To dump information about a plugin, do:
384
385        nbdkit file --dump-plugin
386
387   Magic parameters
388       Some plugins declare a special "magic config key".  This is a key which
389       is assumed if no "key=" part is present.  For example:
390
391        nbdkit file disk.img
392
393       is assumed to be "file=disk.img" because the file plugin declares
394       "file" as its magic config key.  There can be ambiguity in the parsing
395       of magic config keys if the value might look like a "key=value".  If
396       there could be ambiguity then modify the value, eg. by prefixing it
397       with "./"
398
399       There is also a special exception for plugins which do not declare a
400       magic config key, but where the first plugin argument does not contain
401       an '=' character: it is assumed to be "script=value".  This is used by
402       scripting language plugins:
403
404        nbdkit perl foo.pl [args...]
405
406       has the same meaning as:
407
408        nbdkit perl script=foo.pl [args...]
409
410   Shebang scripts
411       You can use "#!" to run nbdkit plugins written in most scripting
412       languages.  The file should be executable.  For example:
413
414        #!/usr/sbin/nbdkit perl
415        sub open {
416          # etc
417        }
418
419       (see nbdkit-perl-plugin(3) for a full example).
420

SIGNALS

422       nbdkit responds to the following signals:
423
424       "SIGINT"
425       "SIGQUIT"
426       "SIGTERM"
427           The server exits cleanly.
428
429       "SIGPIPE"
430           This signal is ignored.
431

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

433       "LISTEN_FDS"
434       "LISTEN_PID"
435           If present in the environment when nbdkit starts up, these trigger
436           "SOCKET ACTIVATION" in nbdkit-service(1).
437

SEE ALSO

439   Other topics
440       nbdkit-captive(1) — Run nbdkit under another process and have it
441       reliably cleaned up.
442
443       nbdkit-loop(1) — Use nbdkit with the Linux kernel client to create loop
444       devices and loop mounts.
445
446       nbdkit-probing(1) — How to probe for nbdkit configuration and plugins.
447
448       nbdkit-protocol(1) — Which parts of the NBD protocol nbdkit supports.
449
450       nbdkit-service(1) — Running nbdkit as a service, and systemd socket
451       activation.
452
453       nbdkit-tls(1) — Authentication and encryption of NBD connections
454       (sometimes incorrectly called "SSL").
455
456   Plugins
457       nbdkit-curl-plugin(1), nbdkit-data-plugin(1),
458       nbdkit-example1-plugin(1), nbdkit-example2-plugin(1),
459       nbdkit-example3-plugin(1), nbdkit-example4-plugin(1),
460       nbdkit-ext2-plugin(1), nbdkit-file-plugin(1), nbdkit-floppy-plugin(1),
461       nbdkit-full-plugin(1), nbdkit-guestfs-plugin(1), nbdkit-gzip-plugin(1),
462       nbdkit-iso-plugin(1), nbdkit-libvirt-plugin(1),
463       nbdkit-linuxdisk-plugin(1), nbdkit-memory-plugin(1),
464       nbdkit-nbd-plugin(1), nbdkit-null-plugin(1),
465       nbdkit-partitioning-plugin(1), nbdkit-pattern-plugin(1),
466       nbdkit-random-plugin(1), nbdkit-split-plugin(1), nbdkit-ssh-plugin(1),
467       nbdkit-streaming-plugin(1), nbdkit-tar-plugin(1),
468       nbdkit-vddk-plugin(1), nbdkit-zero-plugin(1) ; nbdkit-lua-plugin(3),
469       nbdkit-ocaml-plugin(3), nbdkit-perl-plugin(3), nbdkit-python-plugin(3),
470       nbdkit-ruby-plugin(3), nbdkit-rust-plugin(3), nbdkit-sh-plugin(3),
471       nbdkit-tcl-plugin(3) .
472
473   Filters
474       nbdkit-blocksize-filter(1), nbdkit-cache-filter(1),
475       nbdkit-cow-filter(1), nbdkit-delay-filter(1), nbdkit-error-filter(1),
476       nbdkit-fua-filter(1), nbdkit-log-filter(1), nbdkit-noextents-filter(1),
477       nbdkit-nozero-filter(1), nbdkit-offset-filter(1),
478       nbdkit-partition-filter(1), nbdkit-rate-filter(1),
479       nbdkit-readahead-filter(1), nbdkit-truncate-filter(1),
480       nbdkit-xz-filter(1) .
481
482   For developers
483       nbdkit-plugin(3), nbdkit-filter(3).
484
485   Writing plugins in other programming languages
486       nbdkit-lua-plugin(3), nbdkit-ocaml-plugin(3), nbdkit-perl-plugin(3),
487       nbdkit-python-plugin(3), nbdkit-ruby-plugin(3), nbdkit-rust-plugin(3),
488       nbdkit-sh-plugin(3), nbdkit-tcl-plugin(3) .
489
490   NBD clients
491       qemu(1), nbd-client(1), guestfish(1).
492
493   nbdkit links
494       http://github.com/libguestfs/nbdkit — Source code.
495
496   Other NBD servers
497       qemu-nbd(1), nbd-server(1), https://bitbucket.org/hirofuchi/xnbd.
498
499   Documentation for the NBD protocol
500       https://github.com/NetworkBlockDevice/nbd/blob/master/doc/proto.md,
501       https://nbd.sourceforge.io/.
502
503   Similar protocols
504       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/iSCSI,
505       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATA_over_Ethernet,
506       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre_Channel_over_Ethernet.
507
508   Other manual pages of interest
509       gnutls_priority_init(3), qemu-img(1), psktool(1), systemd.socket(5).
510

AUTHORS

512       Eric Blake
513
514       Richard W.M. Jones
515
516       Yann E. MORIN
517
518       Nir Soffer
519
520       Pino Toscano
521
523       Copyright (C) 2013-2018 Red Hat Inc.
524

LICENSE

526       Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
527       modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
528       met:
529
530       ·   Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
531           notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
532
533       ·   Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
534           notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
535           documentation and/or other materials provided with the
536           distribution.
537
538       ·   Neither the name of Red Hat nor the names of its contributors may
539           be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
540           without specific prior written permission.
541
542       THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY RED HAT AND CONTRIBUTORS ''AS IS'' AND ANY
543       EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
544       IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
545       PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL RED HAT OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
546       LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
547       CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
548       SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR
549       BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
550       WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
551       OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
552       ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
553
554
555
556nbdkit-1.12.3                     2019-05-22                         nbdkit(1)
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