Table of Contents
- Title and Copyright Information
- Using This Documentation
-
1
About Network File Systems
- About the NFS Service
- About Autofs
- NFS Terminology
-
Features of the NFS Service
- NFS Version 2 Protocol
- NFS Version 3 Protocol
- NFS Version 4 Protocol
- NFS Version 4.1 Protocol
- Controlling NFS Versions
- NFS ACL Support
- NFS Over TCP
- NFS Over UDP
- Overview of NFS Over RDMA
- Network Lock Manager and NFS
- NFS Large File Support
- NFS Client Failover
- Kerberos Support for the NFS Service
- WebNFS Support
- RPCSEC_GSS Security Flavor
- Extensions for NFS Mounting
- Security Negotiation for the WebNFS Service
- NFS Server Logging
- Autofs Features
- Tunable Parameters
- Removing Hidden NFS Files
- Significant Changes in the Oracle Solaris 11.4 Release
-
2
Network File System Features
-
How the NFS Service Works
- Planned Graceless Recovery
- NFS Over RDMA
- Version Negotiation in NFS
- Features in NFS Version 4.1
- Features in NFS Version 4
- UDP and TCP Negotiation
- File Transfer Size Negotiation
- How File Systems Are Mounted in NFS Version 3
- Effects of the -public Option and NFS URLs When Mounting
- Client-Side Failover
- How NFS Server Logging Works
- How the WebNFS Service Works
- How WebNFS Security Negotiation Works
- WebNFS Limitations With Web Browser Use
- How Mirror Mounts Work
- How NFS Referrals Work
-
How Autofs Works
- How Autofs Navigates Through the Network
- Autofs Maps
- How Autofs Starts the Navigation Process
- Autofs Mount Process
- How Autofs Selects the Nearest Read-Only Files for Clients
- Autofs and Weighting
- Variables in an Autofs Map Entry
- Maps That Refer to Other Maps
- Executable Autofs Maps
- Default Autofs Behavior With Name Services
- Autofs Reference
-
How the NFS Service Works
-
3
Administering Network File Systems
- About Administering Network File Systems
- Automatic File System Sharing
-
Mounting File Systems
- Mounting File Systems Task Map
- How to Mount a File System at Boot Time
- How to Mount a File System From the Command Line
- Mounting With the Automounter
- How to Mount All File Systems From a Server
- How to Use Client-Side Failover
- How to Disable Mount Access for One Client
- How to Mount an NFS File System Through a Firewall
- Mount an NFS File System by Using an NFS URL
- Displaying Information About File Systems Available for Mounting
- Setting Up the NFS Service
- Securing NFS Systems
- Administering WebNFS
- Administering NFS Referrals
-
4
Administering Autofs
- Autofs Administration
- Using SMF Parameters to Configure Your Autofs Environment
- Administrative Tasks for Autofs Maps
- Modifying Autofs Maps
- Avoiding Mount Point Conflicts
- Accessing Non-NFS File Systems
-
Customizing the Automounter
- Setting Up a Common View of /home
- How to Set Up /home With Multiple Home Directory File Systems
- How to Consolidate Project-Related Files Under a Common Directory
- How to Set Up Different Architectures to Access a Shared Name Space
- How to Support Incompatible Client Operating System Versions
- How to Replicate Shared Files Across Several Servers
- Autofs Security Restrictions
- How to Use a Public File Handle With Autofs
- How to Use NFS URLs With Autofs
- Disabling Autofs Browsability
- 5 Commands for Managing Network File Systems
- 6 Troubleshooting Network File Systems
-
7
Accessing Network File Systems
- NFS Files
-
NFS Daemons
- automountd Daemon
- lockd Daemon
- mountd Daemon
- nfs4cbd Daemon
- nfsd Daemon
- nfslogd Daemon
- nfsmapid Daemon
- reparsed Daemon
- statd Daemon
- A NFS File Sharing Command Reference
- Index