NFS-Utils-1.3.0

Introduction to NFS Utilities

The NFS Utilities package contains the userspace server and client tools necessary to use the kernel's NFS abilities. NFS is a protocol that allows sharing file systems over the network.

This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-7.6 systemd platform.

Package Information

Additional Download

NFS Utilities Dependencies

Required

libtirpc-0.2.5

Optional

libevent-2.0.21, SQLite-3.8.6 and libnfsidmap (for NFSv4 support), MIT Kerberos V5-1.12.2 or libgssapi, and librpcsecgss (for GSS and RPC security support)

Required (runtime)

rpcbind-0.2.1

User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/nfs-utils

Kernel Configuration

Enable the following options in the kernel configuration and recompile the kernel if necessary:

File systems  --->
  Network File Systems  --->
    NFS client support: Y or M
    NFS server support: Y or M

Select the appropriate sub-options that appear when the above options are selected.

Installation of NFS Utilities

Before you compile the program, ensure that the nobody user and nogroup group have been created. You can add them by running the following commands as the root user:

groupadd -g 99 nogroup &&
useradd -c "Unprivileged Nobody" -d /dev/null -g nogroup \
    -s /bin/false -u 99 nobody
[Note]

Note

The classic uid and gid values are 65534 which is also -2 when interpreted as a signed 16-bit number. These values impact other files on some filesystems that do not have support for sparse files. The nobody and nogroup values are relatively arbitrary. The impact on a server is nil if the exports file is configured correctly. If it is misconfigured, an ls -l or ps listing will show a uid or gid number of 65534 instead of a name. The client uses nobody only as the user running rpc.statd.

Install NFS Utilities by running the following commands:

patch -Np1 -i ../nfs-utils-1.3.0-gcc_4_9-1.patch &&
./configure --prefix=/usr          \
            --sysconfdir=/etc      \
            --without-tcp-wrappers \
            --disable-nfsv4        \
            --disable-gss &&
make

If your /usr directory is NFS mounted, you should install the executables in /sbin by passing an additional parameter --sbindir=/sbin to the above ./configure command.

To test the results, issue: make check.

Now, as the root user:

make install

Command Explanations

--without-tcp-wrappers: This option is needed because TCP Wrappers is not in BLFS.

--disable-nfsv4: Disables support for NFS version 4.

--disable-gss: Disables support for RPCSEC GSS (RPC Security).

Configuring NFS Utilities

Server Configuration

/etc/exports contains the exported directories on NFS servers. Refer to the exports.5 manual page for the syntax of this file. Also refer to the "NFS HowTo" available at http://nfs.sourceforge.net/nfs-howto/ for information on how to configure the servers and clients in a secure manner. For example, for sharing the /home directory over the local network, the following line may be added:

/home <192.168.0.0/24>(rw,subtree_check,anonuid=99,anongid=99)
Systemd Units

To start the NFS server daemons at boot, install the systemd units from the blfs-systemd-units-20140907 package by running the following command as the root user:

make install-nfs-server

You can edit the /etc/default/nfs-utils file to change the startup options for NFS daemons. Defaults should be fine for most use cases.

Client Configuration

/etc/fstab contains the directories that are to be mounted on the client. Alternately the partitions can be mounted by using the mount command with the proper options. To mount the /home and /usr partitions, add the following to the /etc/fstab:

<server-name>:/home  /home nfs   rw,_netdev 0 0
<server-name>:/usr   /usr  nfs   ro,_netdev 0 0

The options which can be used are specified in man 5 nfs. If both the client and server are running recent versions of linux, most of the options will be negotiated. You can specify either rw or ro, _netdev if the filesystem is to be automatically mounted at boot, or noauto (and perhaps user) for other filesystems.

If the fileserver is not running a recent version of linux, you may need to specifiy other options.

If you are using systemd, you may need to enable autofs v4 in your kernel, and add the option comment=systemd.automount. Some machines need this, because systemd tries to mount the external fs's before the network is up, others do not need it. An alternative is for root to run mount -a.

Systemd Units
[Note]

Note

The following systemd unis are not required if the nfs-server units were previously installed.

To start the NFS client services at boot, install the systemd units from the blfs-systemd-units-20140907 package by running the following command as the root user:

make install-nfs-client

Contents

Installed Programs: exportfs, mountstats, mount.nfs, mount.nfs4 (link to mount.nfs), nfsiostat, nfsstat, osd_login, rpc.mountd, rpc.nfsd, rpc.statd, rpcdebug, showmount, sm-notify, start-statd, umount.nfs (link to mount.nfs), and umount.nfs4 (link to mount.nfs)
Installed Libraries: None
Installed Directories: /var/lib/nfs

Short Descriptions

exportfs

maintains a list of NFS exported file systems.

mountstats

displays NFS client per-mount statistics.

mount.nfs

Used to mount a network share using NFS

mount.nfs4

Used to mount a network share using NFSv4

nfsiostat

Report input/output statistics for network filesystems.

nfsstat

displays statistics kept about NFS client and server activity.

rpc.mountd

implements the NFS mount protocol on an NFS server.

rpc.nfsd

implements the user level part of the NFS service on the server.

rpc.statd

is used by the NFS file locking service. Run on both sides, client as well as server, when you want file locking enabled.

rpcdebug

sets or clears the kernel's NFS client and server debug flags.

showmount

displays mount information for an NFS server.

sm-notify

is used to send Network Status Monitor reboot messages.

start-statd

is a script called by nfsmount when mounting a filesystem with locking enabled, if statd does not appear to be running. It can be customised with whatever flags are appropriate for the site.

umount.nfs

Used to unmount a network share using NFS

umount.nfs4

Used to unmount a network share using NFSv4

Last updated on 2014-08-25 12:54:44 -0700