Part I Network Services Topics
Part II Accessing Network File Systems Topics
4. Managing Network File Systems (Overview)
Kerberos Support for the NFS Service
Solaris 7 Extensions for NFS Mounting
Security Negotiation for the WebNFS Service
5. Network File System Administration (Tasks)
6. Accessing Network File Systems (Reference)
8. Planning and Enabling SLP (Tasks)
10. Incorporating Legacy Services
Part V Serial Networking Topics
15. Solaris PPP 4.0 (Overview)
16. Planning for the PPP Link (Tasks)
17. Setting Up a Dial-up PPP Link (Tasks)
18. Setting Up a Leased-Line PPP Link (Tasks)
19. Setting Up PPP Authentication (Tasks)
20. Setting Up a PPPoE Tunnel (Tasks)
21. Fixing Common PPP Problems (Tasks)
22. Solaris PPP 4.0 (Reference)
23. Migrating From Asynchronous Solaris PPP to Solaris PPP 4.0 (Tasks)
25. Administering UUCP (Tasks)
Part VI Working With Remote Systems Topics
27. Working With Remote Systems (Overview)
28. Administering the FTP Server (Tasks)
29. Accessing Remote Systems (Tasks)
Part VII Monitoring Network Services Topics
This section provides information about new features in releases of the Solaris OS.
The Solaris 10 11/06 release provides support for a file system monitoring tool. See the following:
fsstat Command for a description and examples
fsstat(1M) man page for more information
Additionally, this Guide provides a more detailed description of the nfsmapid daemon. For information about nfsmapid, see the following:
nfsmapid(1M) man page
For a complete list of new features, see Oracle Solaris 10 9/10 What’s New.
Starting in the Solaris 10 release, NFS version 4 is the default. For information about features in NFS version 4 and other changes, refer to the following:
Also, see the following:
Setting Up NFS Services for task information
Oracle Solaris 10 9/10 What’s New for a complete list of new features
Additionally, the NFS service is managed by the Service Management Facility. Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or restarting, can be performed by using the svcadm command. The service's status can be queried by using the svcs command. For more information about the Service Management Facility, refer to the smf(5) man page and Chapter 18, Managing Services (Overview), in System Administration Guide: Basic Administration.