Chapter 14. Network File System (NFS) : Prev Next
Chapter 14. Network File System (NFS) : Prev Next
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Chapter 14. Network File System (NFS)
Network File System (NFS) is a way to share files between machines on a
network as if the files were located on the client's local hard drive. Red Hat
Enterprise Linux can be both an NFS server and an NFS client, which
means that it can export file systems to other systems and mount file
systems exported from other machines.
14.1. Why Use NFS?
NFS is useful for sharing directories of files between multiple users on
the same network. For example, a group of users working on the
same project can have access to the files for that project using a
shared directory of the NFS file system (commonly known as an NFS
share) mounted in the directory /myproject. To access the shared
files, the user goes into the /myproject directory on his machine.
There are no passwords to enter or special commands to remember.
Users work as if the directory is on their local machines.
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14.2. Mounting NFS File Systems
Use the mount command to mount a shared NFS directory from another
machine:
Warning
The mount point directory on the local machine (/misc/local in the
above example) must exist before this command can be executed.
In this command, shadowman.example.com is the hostname of the NFS file
server, /misc/export is the directory that shadowman is exporting, and
/misc/local is the location to mount the file system on the local machine.
After the mount command runs (and if the client has proper permissions
from the shadowman.example.com NFS server) the client user can execute
the command ls /misc/local to display a listing of the files in
/misc/export on shadowman.example.com.
14.2.1. Mounting NFS File Systems using /etc/fstab
An alternate way to mount an NFS share from another machine is to add a
line to the /etc/fstab file. The line must state the hostname of the NFS
server, the directory on the server being exported, and the directory on the
local machine where the NFS share is to be mounted. You must be root to
modify the /etc/fstab file.
The general syntax for the line in /etc/fstab is as follows:
The mount point /pub must exist on the client machine before this
command can be executed. After adding this line to /etc/fstab on the
client system, type the command mount /pub at a shell prompt, and the
mount point /pub is mounted from the server.
14.2.2. Mounting NFS File Systems using autofs
A third option for mounting an NFS share is the use of the autofs service.
Autofs uses the automount daemon to manage your mount points by only
mounting them dynamically when they are accessed.
Autofs consults the master map configuration file /etc/auto.master to
determine which mount points are defined. It then starts an automount
process with the appropriate parameters for each mount point. Each line in
the master map defines a mount point and a separate map file that defines
the file systems to be mounted under this mount point. For example, the
/etc/auto.misc file might define mount points in the /misc directory; this
relationship would be defined in the /etc/auto.master file.
Each entry in auto.master has three fields. The first field is the mount point.
The second field is the location of the map file, and the third field is
optional. The third field can contain information such as a timeout value.
For example, to mount the directory /proj52 on the remote machine
penguin.example.net at the mount point /misc/myproject on your machine,
add the following line to auto.master:
Next, add the following line to /etc/auto.misc:
myproject -rw,soft,intr,rsize=8192,wsize=8192
penguin.example.net:/proj52
The first field in /etc/auto.misc is the name of the /misc subdirectory. This
directory is created dynamically by automount. It should not actually exist
on the client machine. The second field contains mount options such as rw
for read and write access. The third field is the location of the NFS export
including the hostname and directory.
Note
The directory /misc must exist on the local file system. There should
be no subdirectories in /misc on the local file system.
To start the autofs service, at a shell prompt, type the following command:
To view the active mount points, type the following command at a shell
prompt:
If you modify the /etc/auto.master configuration file while autofs is
running, you must tell the automount daemon(s) to reload by typing the
following command at a shell prompt:
To learn how to configure autofs to start at boot time, and for information on
managing services, refer to Chapter 12
Controlling Access to Services
.
14.2.3. Using TCP
The default transport protocol for NFSv4 is TCP; however, the Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 4 kernel includes support for NFS over UDP. To use NFS
over UDP, include the -o udp option to mount when mounting the NFS
exported file system on the client system.
There are three ways to configure an NFS file system export. On demand
via the command line (client side), automatically via the /etc/fstab file
(client side), and automatically via autofs configuration files, such as
/etc/auto.master and /etc/auto.misc (server side with NIS).
For example, on demand via the command line (client side):
When the NFS mount is specified in /etc/fstab (client side):
myproject -rw,soft,intr,rsize=8192,wsize=8192,udp
penguin.example.net:/proj52
Since the default is TCP, if the -o udp option is not specified, the NFS
exported file system is accessed via TCP.
The advantages of using TCP include the following:
• Performance gain on heavily loaded networks because TCP
acknowledges every packet, unlike UDP which only acknowledges
completion.
• TCP has better congestion control than UDP (which has none). On a
very congested network, UDP packets are the first packets that are
dropped. This means that if NFS is writing data (in 8K chunks) all of
that 8K must be retransmitted over UDP. Because of TCP's reliability,
only parts of that 8K data are transmitted at a time.
• Error detection. When a TCP connection breaks (due to the server
being unavailable) the client stops sending data and restarts the
connection process once the server becomes available. With UDP,
since it's connectionless, the client continues to pound the network
with data until the server reestablishes a connection.
The main disadvantage is that there is a very small performance hit due to
the overhead associated with the TCP protocol.
14.2.4. Preserving ACLs
The Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 kernel provides ACL support for the ext3
file system and ext3 file systems mounted with the NFS or Samba
protocols. Thus, if an ext3 file system has ACLs enabled for it and is NFS
exported, and if the NFS client can read ACLs, they are used by the NFS
client as well.
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14.3. Exporting NFS File Systems
Sharing or serving files from an NFS server is known as exporting the
directories. The NFS Server Configuration Tool can be used to configure
a system as an NFS server.
To use the NFS Server Configuration Tool, you must be running the X
Window System, have root privileges, and have the system-config-nfs
RPM package installed. To start the application, select the Main Menu
Button (on the Panel) => System Settings => Server Settings => NFS, or
type the command system-config-nfs.
Figure 141. NFS Server Configuration Tool
To add an NFS share, click the Add button. The dialog box shown in Figure
142 appears.
The Basic tab requires the following information:
• Directory — Specify the directory to share, such as /tmp.
• Host(s) — Specify the host(s) with which to share the directory.
Refer to Section 14.3.2
Hostname Formats
for an explanation of
possible formats.
• Basic permissions — Specify whether the directory should have
readonly or read/write permissions.
Figure 142. Add Share
The General Options tab allows the following options to be configured:
• Allow connections from port 1024 and higher — Services started
on port numbers less than 1024 must be started as root. Select this
option to allow the NFS service to be started by a user other than
root. This option corresponds to insecure.
• Allow insecure file locking — Do not require a lock request. This
option corresponds to insecure_locks.
• Disable subtree checking — If a subdirectory of a file system is
exported, but the entire file system is not exported, the server checks
to see if the requested file is in the subdirectory exported. This check
is called subtree checking. Select this option to disable subtree
checking. If the entire file system is exported, selecting to disable
subtree checking can increase the transfer rate. This option
corresponds to no_subtree_check.
• Sync write operations on request — Enabled by default, this
option does not allow the server to reply to requests before the
changes made by the request are written to the disk. This option
corresponds to sync. If this is not selected, the async option is used.
o Force sync of write operations immediately — Do not
delay writing to disk. This option corresponds to no_wdelay.
The User Access tab allows the following options to be configured:
• Treat remote root user as local root — By default, the user and
group IDs of the root user are both 0. Root squashing maps the user
ID 0 and the group ID 0 to the user and group IDs of anonymous so
that root on the client does not have root privileges on the NFS
server. If this option is selected, root is not mapped to anonymous,
and root on a client has root privileges to exported directories.
Selecting this option can greatly decrease the security of the system.
Do not select it unless it is absolutely necessary. This option
corresponds to no_root_squash.
• Treat all client users as anonymous users — If this option is
selected, all user and group IDs are mapped to the anonymous user.
This option corresponds to all_squash .
o Specify local user ID for anonymous users — If Treat all
client users as anonymous users is selected, this option
lets you specify a user ID for the anonymous user. This option
corresponds to anonuid.
o Specify local group ID for anonymous users — If Treat all
client users as anonymous users is selected, this option
lets you specify a group ID for the anonymous user. This
option corresponds to anongid.
To edit an existing NFS share, select the share from the list, and click the
Properties button. To delete an existing NFS share, select the share from the
list, and click the Delete button.
After clicking OK to add, edit, or delete an NFS share from the list, the
changes take place immediately — the server daemon is restarted and the
old configuration file is saved as /etc/exports.bak. The new configuration
is written to /etc/exports.
The NFS Server Configuration Tool reads and writes directly to the
/etc/exports configuration file. Thus, the file can be modified manually
after using the tool, and the tool can be used after modifying the file
manually (provided the file was modified with correct syntax).
14.3.1. Command Line Configuration
If you prefer editing configuration files using a text editor or if you do not
have the X Window System installed, you can modify the configuration file
directly.
The /etc/exports file controls what directories the NFS server exports. Its
format is as follows:
directory hostname(options)
The only option that needs to be specified is one of sync or async (sync is
recommended). If sync is specified, the server does not reply to requests
before the changes made by the request are written to the disk.
For example,
/misc/export speedy.example.com(sync)
would allow users from speedy.example.com to mount /misc/export with
the default readonly permissions, but,
/misc/export speedy.example.com(rw,sync)
would allow users from speedy.example.com to mount /misc/export with
read/write privileges.
Refer to Section 14.3.2
Hostname Formats
for an explanation of possible
hostname formats.
Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Reference Guide for a list of
options that can be specified.
Caution
Be careful with spaces in the /etc/exports file. If there are no spaces
between the hostname and the options in parentheses, the options apply
only to the hostname. If there is a space between the hostname and the
options, the options apply to the rest of the world. For example, examine
the following lines:
/misc/export speedy.example.com(rw,sync)
/misc/export speedy.example.com (rw,sync)
The
first line grants users from speedy.example.com readwrite access and
denies all other users. The second line grants users from
speedy.example.com readonly access (the default) and allows the rest of
the world readwrite access.
Each time you change /etc/exports, you must inform the NFS daemon of
the change, or reload the configuration file with the following command:
14.3.2. Hostname Formats
The host(s) can be in the following forms:
• Single machine — A fully qualified domain name (that can be
resolved by the server), hostname (that can be resolved by the
server), or an IP address.
• Series of machines specified with wildcards — Use the * or ?
character to specify a string match. Wildcards are not to be used
with IP addresses; however, they may accidentally work if reverse
DNS lookups fail. When specifying wildcards in fully qualified domain
names, dots (.) are not included in the wildcard. For example,
*.example.com includes one.example.com but does not include
one.two.example.com.
• IP networks — Use a.b.c.d/z, where a.b.c.d is the network and z
is the number of bits in the netmask (for example 192.168.0.0/24).
Another acceptable format is a.b.c.d/netmask, where a.b.c.d is the
network and netmask is the netmask (for example,
192.168.100.8/255.255.255.0).
• Netgroups — In the format @group-name, where group-name is the
NIS netgroup name.
14.3.3. Starting and Stopping the Server
On the server that is exporting NFS file systems, the nfs service must be
running.
View the status of the NFS daemon with the following command:
Start the NFS daemon with the following command:
Stop the NFS daemon with the following command:
To start the nfs service at boot time, use the command:
You can also use chkconfig, ntsysv or the Services Configuration Tool
to configure which services start at boot time. Refer to Chapter 12
Controlling Access to Services for details.
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